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[Wargamer] Oh god, the new DnD books have a DLC chart
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Kyonshi
2024-07-06 08:43:01 UTC
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Source: https://www.wargamer.com/dnd/pre-orders-dlc-chart


Oh god, the new DnD books have a DLC chart

Wizards of the Coast’s pre-orders for the OneDnD core books come with a
confusing DLC chart that’s straight out of videogame marketing.



Timothy Linward


Wizards of the Coast has revealed a videogame DLC-style pre-order chart
to explain the bundle options fans have when pre-ordering the new
Dungeons and Dragons core books, and to emphasise the “savings”
available from buying the bigger bundles. But to find the actual price
of the bundles, you have to go to the DnD Beyond storefront.

This is going to be a snarky one, reader. While we’re eagerly awaiting
the new DnD books on the DnD release schedule, seeing this kind of chart
immediately makes us skeptical about the value of the pre-orders, both
as consumer advocates, and as industry observers.

While tabletop roleplaying games are usually a haven away from the
digital world, there’s no denying that digital DnD is a big part of the
game for many players. Wargamer’s DnD expert Mollie Russell is actually
increasingly upbeat about the official DnD virtual tabletop that is
supposed to be such a big part of One DnD. But we’re irked that nonsense
from the world of videogames has come along with it.

The three pre-order tiers are, in ascending order of content (and cost),
a digital only version of the Player’s Handbook ($29.99), a digital and
print bundle ($79.98), and a bundle of all three physical and digital
books ($179.97). All of them come with some number of digital doodads,
like digital DnD dice sets, frames, and backdrops, and early access to
content online.

There’s a $20 discount between the digital-only and digital-and-print
bundle – or to look at it another way, if you buy the print edition, you
can pay a $10 top up to get the digital edition as well. We’re not going
to argue that digital goods should be free – they take effort to design,
even if they’re almost free to reproduce – but it’s crummy that fans who
miss the pre-order window won’t get the same discount.

The bundle of all three core books and digital editions has a $60
discount – so again, you’re paying $10 per digital edition in this
bundle. For locking in a $180 pre-order, you’ll also receive three
additional digital dice sets, 24 extra frames, 10 extra backdrops, the
‘Dragons of D&D’ digital artbook, and a gold dragon digital mini for the
upcoming official DnD virtual tabletop.

If you were going to pre-order anyway, cool, you get some extra stuff.
But is this supposed to be tempting? Would you buy these extras on their
own? Or are they more like the digital knicknacks and cheap resin
statuettes bolted on to videogames, there partly to inflate the
perceived value of the core product, and partly to ensure that the
customer cannot determine what the core of the product actually is from
the matrix of multiple different launch editions.

This DLC chart for the Player’s Handbook isn’t particularly obnoxious,
but as DnD is only going to get more digital, we have to wonder – is
this just the start? Will multiple editions and optional extras proliferate?

“Marketing”, in the big sense, means determining a market group of
potential customers, producing something that meets their desires or
needs, and ensuring they can buy it. It’s a long-term strategy that
requires you clarify the value of a product, not hide it, and
understands that a customer tricked into buying something won’t stay a
customer forever.

The digital shift could be a brilliant thing. The feature in DnD Beyond
that allowed you to purchase only those parts of a book that were
relevant to your character’s DnD class or DnD race, used digital
technology to provide unique a benefit to consumers. But since that
feature was removed without explanation by a recent update, permit us a
little skepticism about how this is all going to turn out.
Spalls Hurgenson
2024-07-07 00:26:04 UTC
Permalink
Post by Kyonshi
Source: https://www.wargamer.com/dnd/pre-orders-dlc-chart
Oh god, the new DnD books have a DLC chart
Wizards of the Coast’s pre-orders for the OneDnD core books come with a
confusing DLC chart that’s straight out of videogame marketing.
Amateurs!

It looks like if you buy the most expensive option, you'll get
everything.

They need to take a page out of Ubisoft's book, and make it so /no/
single option offers all the doodads. E.g., basic gets you the digital
books, bronze gets you print+frame, silver gets you
print+digital+dice+frame, gold gets you print+digital+dice+mini. But
if you want all the extras you need to buy at least TWO editions.

Sure it'll piss off your customers, but you're a mega-corporation,
Hasbro. That's practically your job! Geez, no wonder you're struggling
financially.


/s, obv.
Kyonshi
2024-07-07 11:44:16 UTC
Permalink
Post by Spalls Hurgenson
Post by Kyonshi
Source: https://www.wargamer.com/dnd/pre-orders-dlc-chart
Oh god, the new DnD books have a DLC chart
Wizards of the Coast’s pre-orders for the OneDnD core books come with a
confusing DLC chart that’s straight out of videogame marketing.
Amateurs!
It looks like if you buy the most expensive option, you'll get
everything.
They need to take a page out of Ubisoft's book, and make it so /no/
single option offers all the doodads. E.g., basic gets you the digital
books, bronze gets you print+frame, silver gets you
print+digital+dice+frame, gold gets you print+digital+dice+mini. But
if you want all the extras you need to buy at least TWO editions.
Sure it'll piss off your customers, but you're a mega-corporation,
Hasbro. That's practically your job! Geez, no wonder you're struggling
financially.
/s, obv.
"nono, keep talking"

(Hasbro management, probably)

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