Jefe Bergenstein
Legend
Drawmack said:I have seen a couple of good ideas in this thread:
1) Sell and adventure with a pack of minis that represent the NPCs and villians in that module. This could help both markets. People looking for an adventure spend the extra $10.00 to get the minis with this adventure over other adventures. Granted the d20l prohibits 3rd party manufacturers from packaging the adeventure and the minis together. However, no one can tell you that you cannot release two related products. So sell the adventure with the d20 logo and the minis pack with your adventure's logo. Proxy association and still allows the items to sell individually.
Anytime you increase the price of a product, you limit the number of people buying it. When you combine 2 niche products (minis and pblished adventures), you have an even smaller target audience.
2) Why not save up, buy 200 random packs and open your own shop selling the contents individually? From some of the posts looks as if some people are already doing this. Heck if you're buying that many random packs you could probably contact WOTC directly and get them at a pretty deep discount allowing you to sell hordes of commons cheaper then people can even buy the random packs.
WOTC isnt interested in dealing with orders that small. People just dont seem to grasp that when they say things like "WOTC could sell warband packs online if stores wouldnt order". Chasing that extra thousand bucks or so inst in their best interest. WOTC doesnt care if something will make money, it has to make a LOT of money to justify the opportunity cost of resources that could be better allocated in different areas.
3) Something, I've been thinking of for a long time. While generally low quality and single color I can buy a pack or 100 plastic army men for a buck. Now these packs are randomized, i.e. the number of gunners is not garenteed. So if I'm setting up a battle scene I have to buy 10 packs, at the whopping investment of 10 bucks. So how about low quality, single color orcs, kobolds, goblinoids, skeletons, zombies, etc. sold the same way. How many people would pay for that, I know I would. Even if they are single color and all look the same how cool would it be to have the players leave the room for a minute and come back with the minis sitting at the edge of a cemetary containing 200 zombies and actually have the minis to represent them.
Again, why waste time and effor ton a product that wont guarantee more money for less effort? Say they go through the hoops to get them made (different colors = different plastic = more cost), packaged, distributed, etc. They might make marginally more money than they do now, but for a considerable amount more effort. Its just not worth their time. Another thing to consider is that little green army guys have a winder appeal than D&D figures, so benefit from more economy of scale in production. Also, I'm pretty sure that those guys now cost a lot more than a dollar for a hundred of them. A quick search resulted in this web site.
http://www.plastic-army-men.com
And it appears its about 12 dollars for a hundred, which matches what I recall last time I looked in that section for animals/bugs to use w D&D. Factor in the additional costs for WOTC, and I dont know if you'd be saving much more over buying them on the secondary market.
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