Eldragon said:
There will certainly be other heroes, and always room for more heroes in FR. But if you were to look at the FR books outside of an RPG context, they have gotten pretty stale. The same heroes keep coming back again and again to save the day.
Because that's where the money is.
J. K. Rowling didn't suddenly introduce a new main character, or group, halfway through the Harry Potter stories.
Nobody tunes in to their favorite TV show to find their favorite characters have been written off and replaced by new ones.
Once a writer has established a hero that his audience loves, he sticks with it, because that's where the money is.
Eldragon said:
The writers need to retire some characters and start introducing others. Of course, its hard to introduce new "epic" heroes when the old ones are still around.
And cut their own financial throats?
It takes just as long to write 300 pages about some new hero as it takes to write 300 pages about an established one. It takes just as much of that auther's life to create that either novel.
In exchange for spending a portion of his life writing the book, he gets a percentage of the book's sales.
Wo, which should he do? Spend all that time to make a a few thousand dollars, or spend the same amount of time to make hundreds of thousands of dollars?
Eldragon said:
If a new book were to come out, with a new band of heroes battling evil, its hard to justify the major NPCs not showing up to save the day.
No, it's easy to jsutfiy in many ways.
Why didn't Gandalf and Elrond take the ring to Mount Doom and destroy it? Why didn't Elrond join the Fellowship? Why did Gandalf leave it (twice)?
Eldragon said:
In an RPG setting its a little easier because the DM can wave his hands and say "sorry, Eliminster is busy" and most players will be ok with that.
Bingo!
It's not hard at all to justify missig heroes. They have lives too. Often they're working on the bigger problem, or a different problem, or the current problem just hasn't reached their attention yet. Or they just plain old think that the party of 8th level heroes can handle the troll dungeon and it would be beneath their effort, and embarrassing for that party, when the level 20 archmage shows up to upstage them - they have better things to do.
Eldragon said:
I feel that at some point, beloved characters need to be written out of the story and let a new generation of characters come into play. Preferably these new characters have not achieved godhood.
When the beloved character isn't profitable any more, then it's time to retire him. How many Conan books were there? Sherlock Holmes stories? Tarzan? Superman comics?
Until then, Write the novel, please the fans, and make the big bucks.
It's not hard for a DM to work around it.