Mercurius
Legend
You know, i almost went that route but decided to go more with guild hierarchy.You missed a trick. After novice it could have been:
Basic
Expert
Companion
Master
Immortal
*Only Master grognards or older will get this reference.
You know, i almost went that route but decided to go more with guild hierarchy.You missed a trick. After novice it could have been:
Basic
Expert
Companion
Master
Immortal
*Only Master grognards or older will get this reference.
I didn't say anything about starting a revolution, nor am I complaining or asking WotC to pay attention to me. I'm just pointing out that grognards of different stripes, as a demographic, represent a lot of purchasing power -- especially once you go beyond the core rulebooks. They matter to WotC's bottom line and thus shouldn't be entirely ignored.I know everyone wants to believe they matter, their takes are useful and important, and their $50 purchase, or not, has some impact. But, sorry, you are not important. YOU and people like you, don’t matter. No matter who YOU are. 50k organized grognards don’t matter for a book selling 1MM copies. Your hot take on a Star Wars forum isn’t gonna change the franchise, even if that take gets hundreds of up votes. not how the world works.
But while your forum posts won’t change the Marvel universe, you can do whatever you want in your DnD home game, you can make all your ideas matter in the only place they do, in the game you’re playing.
Edit, not saying you can’t start a revolution or influence people around you, just saying, you’re not gonna pick the next president. People want the big effect because they’re right on the internet or something. Uh no, but you can help the people around you to better understand things.
This isn't particularly useful for this conversation. I get what you're saying, though, even if it is a bit...grognardian about grognardsYou're not a grognard unless you complain about how oversensitive and fragile younger players are while also getting all offended and bent out of shape over little things without seeing the cognitive dissonance
*for the record, I'm a master grognard by your list.
Yes, I hear you. We Expert and Master grognards know that journeymen and apprentices aren't real grognards, but impostors.I don't have any problems with your definitions but emotionally I have a hard time thinking of anyone who was playing 3.x or 4E as a grognard. Man, I am old. Sigh....
yeah, you’re insisting some segment of the market matters more for some essential reason. Nope. What I said, you don’t matter. Grognards that buy every book don’t matter, they buy every book. Grognards that don’t buy any books anymore, don’t matter, they don’t buy books. I suppose those disposable income grognards you talk about matter for their purchases of wizkid and other licensed products. But ultimately, You’re just an old man saying that old men matter and, sorryy, in the TTRPG space, ya don’t. You’re 50 years old and spending a lot of time debating books targeted at kids in their late teens. Think about it. What old forks like us want doesn’t matter. They’re making a product for our kids. You can like if you like, but seriously, get over the idea that grognards matter to anyone making new stuff these days. Stop wanting things to be about you, appreciate all the new stuff being made for othe next gen.I didn't say anything about starting a revolution, nor am I complaining or asking WotC to pay attention to me. I'm just pointing out that grognards of different stripes, as a demographic, represent a lot of purchasing power -- especially once you go beyond the core rulebooks. They matter to WotC's bottom line and thus shouldn't be entirely ignored.
OSR books never got big. Not in a sense that would make a difference to WotC. We are talking tiny fractions of D&D sales.I have a conspiracy theory that Wizards of the Coast freaked out when OSR got big. All those books targeted more for older players then Wizard’s own. BUT, then I realize that OSR games appeal to younger players as well.
And than I get envious of whatever market data Wizards actually has![]()