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D&D General TSR D&D sales numbers compiled by Benjamin Riggs

D&D historian Ben Riggs--author of the upcoming Slaying the Dragon, which is a history of TSR-era (not that TSR, the real one) D&D--compiled some sales figures of AD&D 1st Edition's Player's Handbook and Dungeon Master's Guide from 1979-1990. Behold! Some actual D&D sales numbers! While working on my book #SlayingtheDragon I got a ton of primary source documents containing sales data for...

D&D historian Ben Riggs--author of the upcoming Slaying the Dragon, which is a history of TSR-era (not that TSR, the real one) D&D--compiled some sales figures of AD&D 1st Edition's Player's Handbook and Dungeon Master's Guide from 1979-1990.

Behold! Some actual D&D sales numbers!

While working on my book #SlayingtheDragon I got a ton of primary source documents containing sales data for D&D. With the book coming out, I've been looking for a way to get that data out into the wide world. I'm going to start making charts, and simply posting them. If people want the raw data, I can post that too, but obviously, charts are prettier.

I'm starting with AD&D 1st ed Players Handbook and Dungeon Masters Guide. You'll notice a crash in the mid-80s, and then the sales peter out with the release of 2nd edition.

The sales point to a fact that I believe hasn't been given enough play in our hobby. Namely, TSR was in a tight spot when Lorraine Williams took over the company from Gary Gygax. If it weren't for Lorraine, D&D may have died in the mid-80s.

Just an idea for your consideration...

Oh, and if you haven't preordered my book on D&D history yet, I'll put a link in the comments.

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Go get his book! It’s going to be interesting!

 

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Lanefan

Victoria Rules
Yeah, no. That wasn't it at all.

The reason 2e was roundly vilified by (some) players had a lot of reasons, including (but not limited to) the following:

1. It was the post-Gygax edition. Right out of the gate, that turned off a lot of people (especially because it wasn't generally known what happened). Remember that 2e was released shortly after WG7 ... so, yeah.

2. Caving into the Satanic Panic. 2e was the "cleaned up" edition, without devils and demons and half-orcs and the evocative line art. Again, this was a major point for some players.

3. "Dumbing it down." We laugh about Gygaxian purplish prose now, but one person's rules streamlining is another person's "dumbing it down."

4. Storygames and books and heroes, oh my. Finally, 2e was seen (rightly or wrongly) as the final step toward the Hickman model for D&D- settings and heroes as opposed to the older free-wheeling model.

So beyond the mechanical changes, there was a backlash to what 2e embodied. I'm not saying it was right or wrong, but it was every bit as vicious as any other edition war. There just wasn't a prominent internet to spread it around.
Around here IME only the second point listed above caused any significant backlash; but thenit's safe to say most if not all of our crew would rather have seen TSR stand up against the BADD types and fight them in the trenches rather than concede to them.

Other than that, some of what 2e formally introduced was stuff we'd long since already houseruled in (or, mostly, out e.g. xp-for-gp); and we largely ignored the rest other than poaching some of the better spells, monsters, and setting ideas.
 

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Reynard

Legend
Has anyone sleuthed out the source yet? It's got to be Dancey, right? Who else would have such complete data but want to be kept out of it?
 

Jer

Legend
Supporter
And now second edition
So it looks like, if I'm reading the graphs right, 2e had one year of peak level sales reminiscent of its early 80s heights, and then sales settled back to where they were in 1985 - which was at least a boost over where they were for the 3 years before the new edition was released. The revised 2e with new art didn't give the edition any boost - arguably it might have kept it at that 1985 level of sales for an extra year but then sales tanked even lower the year before bankruptcy.

With these numbers too you can see why they decided to phase out Basic/Expert D&D when they decided to just have one D&D edition to support. To be sure I'd love to see D&D Rules Cyclopedia numbers if he has them - in 1991 they released a new Basic Set (Black Box) and the Rules Cyclopedia collecting all of the BECM modules of BECMI into a single book. Would love to see how that compared to 2e, though I'm betting that 2e outsold the RC.
 


Stormonu

Legend
Bens main graph for those without facebook. Wow! I knew about the > 600,000 figure but this is amazing to see.

View attachment 252897
Okay, I'm wracking my age-rattled brain trying to remember - what happened in '84 for such a huge drop (that was a year after the Mentzer BECMI release, right?), and the spike in '91 (Black box?)?

Coincedentally, '84 was 8th grade for me as I remember, and that was the year I got my AD&D books as a "graduation" present - with the Easley covers, from Toys'R'Us of all places.
 

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