Mouseferatu said:
When sales actually drop markedly over something, and pick back up when that something is gone, it can't really be called a "screaming minority" anymore, can it?
I freely admit this is a subject in which rationality goes out the window for me, I'm afraid...
The people who stopped buying
Dungeon because of
Poly exerted a different sort of pressure on the publisher, one which hit the bottom line instead of the message boards. But it's the same kind of response, one in which ruining someone else's fun is okay if it means getting one's way. Don't like the mini-games? Boycott the magazine! Don't like the column? Bad-mouth the writer! It's small-minded, and it's ugly.
I stopped buying
Dungeon after
Poly was dropped, as it no longer offered useful content for me. The same can't be said of the people who complained about
Poly's inclusion - they still had useful content in
every issue that included
Poly, but that still wasn't good enough. And please correct me if I'm wrong, but from what I've read
Dungeon's circulation didn't jump by 51% after
Poly disappeared - it was a minority of purchasers as well, and Paizo wasn't willing or able to ride it out and re-position itself in the market. (Yes, responsibility to shareholders and all that...but how does anything innovative grow if the bottom line is the only measure of success?)
Now a one-page column is dropped because the writer decides it's not worth the grief to subject himself to childish taunts anymore (the "straw that broke the back," as it was described earlier). Like I said, it's ugly, and it's also sad.
And I wouldn't have minded hearing what Wil had to say about poker. It's a game I play too.