Akrasia
Procrastinator
caudor said:.... I'd be inclined to believe that D&D is at its peak right now, especially considering what the D&D brand manager said more players than ever....
But if his claim is based on sales of the PHB alone, then it is pretty misleading for two reasons:
(a.) Many purchases of the 3.5 version of the PHB were not "new players", though they were "new purchases".
(b.) During the 1980s there was a fully supported version of the game -- called, ironically enough, "Dungeons and Dragons" -- that did not require the purchase of the PHB. So during the 1980s many D&D players never bought the hardbacks that provide the comparison class in question.
caudor said:To back this up a little more: Also, consider the fact that D&D has spawned/inspired other avenues of fantasy roleplaying such as A-list computer games (i.e Neverwinter Night, EQ, etc). There have been movies and best-selling novels based on D&D since the 80's. Movie stars will openly admit they play D&D now days. And D&D's 30th anniversary just made the front page of CNN. A whole industry based on d20 as greatly expanded the availability of compatible products.
Plausible, but many of the "spin-off" games (NWN, EQ, etc) may have actually weakened overall support for traditional PnP D&D.
And the fact that D&D is now an accepted part of the popular culture does not necessarily mean that it is more popular (in terms of people playing). For example, I suppose that "punk music" is probably more embedded (and hence acceptable) in our popular culture today than it was during the 1970s, but I doubt it is more popular (in the sense that there are more "punks" around now than there were then).
But I just don't know ...
