I see the same attitude that has brought down Wil Save as being the same attitude as wrecked Polyhedron, and pretty much wrecked Dragon: A large faction of readers who don't want anything other than a monthly packet of "Official" new feats/spells/prestige classes and plenty of glossy hype about the newest WotC D&D books. In 2000, the preeminent magazine of the roleplaying industry, focusing on D&D, became just D&D and quality began a downward slide. Years later I can go back to a Dragon from a decade or two ago, pick it up and read a fine article on the art of DM'ing, a bit about how to adapt a historic period or fantasy novel into D&D, or some intelligent discussion. When you pick up a Dragon from the 2000 to present era 10 or 20 years from now, will it still intrique you, or will it be just a collection of then-outdated rules and tie-in hype to the book of the month?