Which in short means you think he was
a) lying
b) mistaken
c) inept
It doesn't in anyway assume that the Campaign Builder isn't under production. It kind of hints that they may be announcing that soon too.
The team is very small we have seen they struggle to keep updates and meet deadlines with just the projects we know about, and you think there is two or three more projects going on as well?
(cross-posted from Wizards boards)
Sorry but I'm not happy that yet again more resources are going to be wasted on a Virtual Table. Perhaps Wizards of the Coast have a really short memory, it's clear as a company they don't learn from their mistakes.
It was only April last year that the results of the D&DI survey were announced. Unfortunately those results appear to have since been removed from wizards site, but thanks to the power of the Internet I can quote them for you here.
In response to that WotC_Trevor said...
They got as far as Monsters, and we got the Monster builder.... and eventually abandoned it in a half-working state. Now we've learned after doing that, they went back and redesigned the Character Builder (into a half-working state) so it could be online to protect their IP better. After that they've gone back to the VT, the VT that was 5th on the desires of subscribers and 4th on the wants of non-subscribers.
The only thing that has changed since that survey is that now there are multiple VT's available both for free and for one off payments, which have been getting better and better.
Where the heck is the encounter builder, map builder, and other campaign management tools they said they would focus on, because we said it was what we wanted?
Don't waste resources on the VT until you can actually get the stuff we want working.
Do you know how small the team is?
And do you know how many projects they can work on at one time? You might be guessing that they can't do more than one or two things at the time... but I imagine you don't know.
Also, parallel development can introduce configuration management overheads. For example, say you have multiple projects that utilise the same database. You have to control changes that you make to the database structure so that at some point you can apply all the changes to all the project code. It's easier to control this when one project follows the other than it is with projects whose deployments into different environments overlap (it is normal to have a minimum of 3 environments - development, test and production; you often have many more. Each environment needs to have the code and database configured for the particular product release).Six people, until very recently now seven and not all of them programmers.
Each person can only do one thing at any one time. As to how many projects they could have running concurrently they could have 20 but you can be certain if they do those projects won't get the same amount of attention than if they had say four.
Do you know how small the team is? And do you know how many projects they can work on at one time? You might be guessing that they can't do more than one or two things at the time... but I imagine you don't know.
So to get all up in arms about things you have no idea about is a waste of time and energy on your part. Of course, you're welcome to waste it all you want... just like we're welcome to point that fact out to you.
Some people are never happy.
Look into almost all the posts preceeding the release of the Online CB, what do people want? Most of them wanted a VTT.
What did Wizards give? A VTT.
Now what do people want? Something else.
I think I'm beginning to detect a trend.