Someone can make a decision that seems perfectly sound based on the information available at the time the decision was made, and have that decision completely fail.
Case in point: the Maginot Line.
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Someone can make a decision that seems perfectly sound based on the information available at the time the decision was made, and have that decision completely fail.
I think you're right there. I can imagine them being involved in overall strategic planning to some extent, but certainly not day-to-day operations.Things like IP protection and such, I'm sure Hasbro is all over. But the details of the game are probably the last thing Hasbro wants to be bothered with.
Again, it's not about the timing of the criticism, it's the basis for it. If you said "moving away from the OGL is a bad idea" in 2008 based on your personal perceptions of things, that's just a conjecture. You certainly didn't know how much of a positive impact that the OGL had for WotC (seems very likely that it had some), and you didn't know (with any real certainty) that moving away from it would cause significant problems.Except that a lot of people are still saying the same things they were saying in 2008.
Huh? You called it "hindsight", the whole point of that is timing and NOT basis.Again, it's not about the timing of the criticism, it's the basis for it. If you said "moving away from the OGL is a bad idea" in 2008 based on your personal perceptions of things, that's just a conjecture. You certainly didn't know how much of a positive impact that the OGL had for WotC (seems very likely that it had some), and you didn't know (with any real certainty) that moving away from it would cause significant problems.
So you are just equating it to a 50/50 flip of a coin? Really?Now, in hindsight, you appear to have been prescient. But even if everyone just flipped a coin in 2008, 50% of us could now be taking credit for getting it right.
Now, only at an hypothetical level, what if it was the opposite?
And, you know, he's right. Many people here indeed think and refer to Paizo as a good-hearted company that wants to keep on sharing with the OGL, distributing and updating the 3.5e ruleset, give candy to everyone. The same people ofter refer to WotC as a candy-stealing, evil monster who wants to kill D&D and kick its corpse until it is barely recognisable; a company who failingly wanted to appeal to videogame players, who releases books, supplements, and new editions only for money grabbing purposes. I know that I'm overstating, but you know it to be true at the core.
And, you know, he's right. Many people here indeed think and refer to Paizo as a good-hearted company that wants to keep on sharing with the OGL, distributing and updating the 3.5e ruleset, give candy to everyone. The same people ofter refer to WotC as a candy-stealing, evil monster who wants to kill D&D and kick its corpse until it is barely recognisable; a company who failingly wanted to appeal to videogame players, who releases books, supplements, and new editions only for money grabbing purposes. I know that I'm overstating, but you know it to be true at the core.
Now, only at an hypothetical level, what if it was the opposite?
But then I look at their output. Their "open playtest". Pick the results then claim you're holding an open playtest.
But Paizo continued to erode my good will by selling my address. After an emergency move, Paizo was the only company aside from my utilities that had my new address. I received a Bradford Exchange catalogue, and later a WotC ad for their high-budget chess set. The chess set flyer caused a stink and Paizo eventually communicated that yes, they had given our addresses to WotC- but only because WotC had the rights to subscriber information. It is extremely unlikely that Westar Energy sold my address to the Bradford Exchange. I have never expressed to Westar any interest in replica Harry Potter wands or pewter dragons with zircon eyes.
Wait, why don't we have Umbran or some other Exalted Community Star Hero Support Moderator waving his finger at edition warring and anti-company sniping?
Oh wait, it's a pro-WotC, anti-Paizo thread. That kind of explains the situation.
Ah, but are the pirate(cats) also ninjas?A public service anouncement: the (supposedly) dark, putrid nectar of pro-Wotc-bias cannot be cured with the sap from the Enworld-moderation-acitivity-criticism-tree. Disregarding this warning can lead to rashes, pimples and angry cats (who are also pirates).
Oh wait, it's a pro-WotC, anti-Paizo thread. That kind of explains the situation.