Obryn
Hero
It will never, ever get more difficult to copy and distribute any information that can be represented digitally - books, music, video, games, and so on. The cat is out of that bag - way, way out. If Bittorrent & Rapidshare die, other things will take their place. This isn't a philosophy, it's just a simple fact about technology.
That's also not to say it's right or wrong - much like the price of gas, it just kind of is.
Books have a perk for those who make them - the physical book has an added value for the information. Gaming books, especially, provide added value for their physical form.
I doubt that the PDF piracy will cut into sales. I have no doubt that some people who pre-ordered for curiosity will decide they don't like the books, and cancel their orders. Other casual browsers might do the same.
On the other hand, it's clear that 4e is a very high-quality, excellent game. PDF availability in this case could actually drive sales - both of the core books, and then subsequently to sourcebooks.
Look at In Rainbows - even after it was given away for free, it sold like crazy. Look at Cory Doctorow's books - he opens them up via a creative commons license, but it's never hurt his sales - in fact, it's arguably helped.
This is all just armchair philosophy; I just wanted to say that the issue is not as clear-cut as "PDFs will cripple 4e's sales."
-O
That's also not to say it's right or wrong - much like the price of gas, it just kind of is.
Books have a perk for those who make them - the physical book has an added value for the information. Gaming books, especially, provide added value for their physical form.
I doubt that the PDF piracy will cut into sales. I have no doubt that some people who pre-ordered for curiosity will decide they don't like the books, and cancel their orders. Other casual browsers might do the same.
On the other hand, it's clear that 4e is a very high-quality, excellent game. PDF availability in this case could actually drive sales - both of the core books, and then subsequently to sourcebooks.
Look at In Rainbows - even after it was given away for free, it sold like crazy. Look at Cory Doctorow's books - he opens them up via a creative commons license, but it's never hurt his sales - in fact, it's arguably helped.
This is all just armchair philosophy; I just wanted to say that the issue is not as clear-cut as "PDFs will cripple 4e's sales."
-O