I start to think that the launch of 4E isn't a pooch-humping. Seriously, why do ads and stuff now? Only dedicated gamers (as we on ENWorld) will be interested in it - and we get the infos by cribbing all notes, posts, whatever together. That's sort of fun.Alzrius said:Indeed. The failure of Gleemax is just part of the great pooch-humping that is (the launch of) 4E.
Scribble said:Not sure I'm ready to call Gleemax a "failure" just yet...
No, once they start an honest dialogue about what's happened in the past and what they hope to do about it, they regain consumer confidence.Relique du Madde said:You forget that no matter what, even if WoTC is listening to the BMC, they are unable to cannot come out and say "We really screwed the pooch on <insert blunder>" because once they do they would destroy even more consumer confidence in their products, services, and decisions. All they are basically able to do is say, "We decided to improve X by doing Y and in the process we made X become a whole lot X-ier because the previous version of X was broke and flawed!"
Or they could have done the reasonable and cost-effective thing, and just licensed off-the-shelf technology like Wordpress, vBulletin and MediaWiki. Then they'd have millions of people available to help them -- for free -- if they ran into any problems. There are also available platforms for business whiteboards -- essentially the virtual tabletop, without specialized tools bolted onto it.haakon1 said:I'm feeling sorry for WOTC . . .
Perhaps they should have allied with Yahoo, MSN, IAC, or anybody else who knows the web. Or even AOL -- D&D could be buried in their next to Movie Fone and probably would actually work.![]()
Whizbang Dustyboots said:No, once they start an honest dialogue about what's happened in the past and what they hope to do about it, they regain consumer confidence.
SavageRobby said:WotC: We have top men working on it now.
Gamers: Who?
WotC: Top ... men.