Tell me about your experiences running games at a FLGS

I think the reason its uncommon here in the twin cities is we have not only a ton of gaming stores locally, but we have some with very large gaming spaces. We got the usual 4 table strip mall joints, but we also got like 2000 SQ ft gaming space joints that can really pack em in.
I live in Southern California, where commercial real estate -- all real estate, really, unless you want to build a logistics warehouse -- is pricy, pricy, pricy. I don't begrudge the store in wanting to see immediate financial return on hosting games.
 

log in or register to remove this ad

I live in Southern California, where commercial real estate -- all real estate, really, unless you want to build a logistics warehouse -- is pricy, pricy, pricy. I don't begrudge the store in wanting to see immediate financial return on hosting games.
I can see that. I think there has been some reduction in the suburban mall nobody goes to anymore variety in the mid-west.

Though, one of out largest stores (former FFG HQ event center) tried to go full fee to play for any game. Turned the place into a ghost town and nearly ran them out of business before they opened back up free to play (pay for tournaments). They had a pretty weird pay structure. It was like 10 bucks, but you got it back in store credit, but that store credit wasnt stackable... They also had a monthly sub that waved the fees but almost nobody signed up for it.
 

I live in Southern California, where commercial real estate -- all real estate, really, unless you want to build a logistics warehouse -- is pricy, pricy, pricy. I don't begrudge the store in wanting to see immediate financial return on hosting games.
In that case, just don't do what Emerald Knights in Burbank does/did. They charged a high enough fee to be questionable, and it was foisted on the shoulders of the GM to handle (purposely or not, I don't know). I ran two games there and never went back.
 


In that case, just don't do what Emerald Knights in Burbank does/did. They charged a high enough fee to be questionable, and it was foisted on the shoulders of the GM to handle (purposely or not, I don't know). I ran two games there and never went back.
Oh, yikes. This store doesn't charge the DM, charges the players (and handles the fees through an online storefront) and gives the DM some sort of store credit. It appears to be a pretty good system.
 

Paying to play at FLGS isnt something thats common here. I hear about it, but only tournament formats do it. RPGs are basically free first come first serve game space. Though, I could see a fee going towards the store and materials and helping keep attendance up.

I think the reason its uncommon here in the twin cities is we have not only a ton of gaming stores locally, but we have some with very large gaming spaces. We got the usual 4 table strip mall joints, but we also got like 2000 SQ ft gaming space joints that can really pack em in.
Nor here. I was running at a gaming cafe, and while they expected people to spend money on snacks, for every person that made sure to buy something, there were two that just showed up.
 

Nor here. I was running at a gaming cafe, and while they expected people to spend money on snacks, for every person that made sure to buy something, there were two that just showed up.
Yeah, you are always going to have folks playing and never paying. Though, most owners I speak to are cool with it as folks that do buy stuff tend to make up for it. Having a bunch of people playing is always better than having two people playing. It makes things look happening and then it trickles up in sales.

I was also told that our Battletech group is most welcome becasue every time they get a case of blind box single mechs, they sell out immediately. They never hesitate to order those up!
 


Remove ads

Top