Ashrem Bayle said:The way I see it, if it was 1-5th level for $60, I'm getting about 20 game sessions for $60. That's $3 per 4 hours game session. Since the average 2 hour movie ticket is what? $10? That's cheap entertainment.
On the other hand, it's $60 for game stuff, so it just depends on perspective.
I'm less frugal than you, but I would be hyper-aware that $60 would buy me four or five Goodman Games Dungeon Crawl Classics, or two full-color oversized DCC tournament modules. I'd have a hard time buying a $60 adventure unless it offered an exceptional amount of value in other way.Jer said:It's the "$60 in one chunk" part that would make it too tough for me. My gaming budget is pretty restricted currently, so that would be about 2-3 months of spending money to wrap up in one product - it better be a darn good dungeon. For that much money I could get a couple of different adventures, a stack of Dungeon Tiles, or a large chunk of miniatures.
That said, I've become quite the cheapskate over the last few years, so I may not be a good judge of how popular a product is going to be. Going out to movies is an "event" in my house at this point - we tend to wait for the DVD release unless we feel like going on a "date" anymore.
Whizbang Dustyboots said:I'm less frugal than you, but I would be hyper-aware that $60 would buy me four or five Goodman Games Dungeon Crawl Classics, or two full-color oversized DCC tournament modules. I'd have a hard time buying a $60 adventure unless it offered an exceptional amount of value in other way.
Which only works if you use miniatures.Ashrem Bayle said:The way I see it, even if the adventure stunk, you'd still get a boat load of minis and maps that could be used for your own games.
Until I know that Catalyst makes a profit on it, I'll reserve judgment!HellHound said:Let's look at Catalyst Labs' latest boxed set release:
MSRP on that sucker is $40 - now it needs to be pointed out that the R&D cost on this set is very low, the minis are not painted, the mapsheets are cheap poster-maps (not the heavy cardboard of the original Battletech boxed set).
Ashrem Bayle said:Cross-posted from the WOTC boards:
Imagine this:
For, let's say $60, you get:
- An adventure that goes from 1st to 5th level.
- A miniature for every monster used in the adventure. (Let's assume 20 minis, many of course would be used multiple times.)
- Miniature scale maps for every planned encounter. (Let's assume 15 maps.)
- A small book for the players that has 10-15 pre-generated PCs complete with proposed backgrounds and story hooks.
- A book for the DM that has the adventure in it.
- An appendix book that includes stats for nonstandard monsters, new magic items, town/city details, etc.
I wonder if there is a market for this and if WOTC is giving it any thought. What do you guys think?
Whizbang Dustyboots said:Which only works if you use miniatures.
I'd find more reuse in more DCC modules than a single WotC one.
Really, this fails if people don't use miniatures. And even then, you have to convince the miniatures-users that these miniatures are worth getting and that they want this adventure. That's shaving the pool of potential customers down multiple times. I think WotC would be better off making all of these products linked, but available separately:
1) Keep on the Shadowfell (or whatever) module
2) Keep on the Shadowfell non-randomized miniatures box and battlemaps
3) Keep on the Shadowfell supplement, with optional crunch
Jer said:I wouldn't get it - $60 shoots right past my spending limit and out the other end for a single product.
I could see picking up something like it, but the price point would have to be closer to $40. A scaled back version like:
- An adventure that goes from 1st to 5th level.
- Miniatures to do the "big encounters" in the adventure (let's say 8 minis - one "booster pack" worth)
- Miniature scale maps for the "big encounters" in the adventure (let's say 4 maps - one "map folio" worth)
- A bunch of "Dungeon Tiles" to piece together for other encounters in the adventure
- A set of tokens for the encounters not covered by the miniatures in the box
- A book for the DM that has the adventure in it, as well as stats for anything "nonstandard" in the adventure
- A set of 4 premade PCs, usable as a party out of the box
- 4 extra minis - one for each of the premade PCs
(I could do without the premade PCs, but that would defeat the purpose of having an "adventure in a box")
For that, I'd be willing to shell out $35-$45.