Maxperson
Morkus from Orkus
Enough of a trend to be a concern for WotC from a marketing standpoint, though.
Not just your preference....
I think there are enough people who want such content for it to be a WotC concern, yes.
Enough of a trend to be a concern for WotC from a marketing standpoint, though.
Not just your preference....
I think there are enough people who want such content for it to be a WotC concern, yes.
Well, three novelists don't make a novel line. That's a pretty sad number of novels. Plus, two of the authors (and their most famous characters) aren't well liked.
They need more authors, but aren't in a great position to find new blood. The last time they tried to expand the number of novels, the best they could do is bringing in people who used to write for D&D 20 years ago.
The novels situation is tricky. There's a lot going on there. For starters, Realms novels are basically Young Adult fiction, and always have been. But there's a heck of a lot more competition in the YA field. And a heck of a lot more mature, grown up fantasy fiction. Staying competitive on book shelves is much harder now.
Plus the Realms have a HUGE back catalogue of novels. They can make a decent amount of money just keeping classics in print.
Licensing it out to another publisher makes it significantly easier to get new writers. And good writers. Which has always been the issue with the D&D novels. And the other company is likely much more proficient in novel soliciting, distribution, and the like.
You mock, but there's something nice about having the people in charge be approachable. You can ask them anything, and not in a "mail in a question and hope it is answered" sort of way. And as people interact with them and talk about #dnd it makes the game visible.
Calm down, please. People talking to each other about their hobbies is not a problem in the slightest. It's neither a binary thing, nor are they required to account to you for how they spend their time.
If you want more content delivered at a faster pace by WotC, posting it here (over and over) is counterproductive. If you actually want your voice to be heard, message Mearls & company on Twitter. Otherwise you're you (peeing) in the wind.
Then what do we call someone standing down wind?
Calm down, please. People talking to each other about their hobbies is not a problem in the slightest. It's neither a binary thing, nor are they required to account to you for how they spend their time.
The only people who would know are WotC and Tor. But something like that wouldn't surprise me. Paizo did it for a reason, so it makes sense WotC might also consider that as an option.I know that Paizo uses Tor Books for their novels now and that does make sense to use a specialist company. Have you heard that WotC is doing something similar?