Wednesday, July 1, 2009

EDITORIAL: What to Do With Specialist Games?


In various Specialist Games-related forums, you often see players decrying Games Workshop's limited support for the many and varied Specialist Games. A case in point is the lack of 6mm-scale Necron and Tyranid armies for use with Epic:Armageddon, mentioned in an earlier post.

This situation was exacerbated recently when several popular Forge World Epic miniatures disappeared from the online store, such as the Tau, Grey Knight Terminators and Warhound Titans. Understandably, many members of the Epic community are more than a little annoyed by this--particularly since, to date, there has been no official communication from either FW or GW about what is going on.

My spies tell me the situation is that these Epic moulds require re-tooling, and FW is reviewing the financial viability of doing this, but official confirmation would be nice...hint hint, GW/FW!

Nevertheless, this situation raises the issue of what GW could and should be doing with its SG ranges. Most notably, GW's marketing department should be doing a lot more to communicate with these player bases, but there is more they could be doing as well: they could be leveraging their SG range in order to retain their aging player base. I will use my favourite SG game, Epic:Armageddon, to explain.

As previously discussed in my series of posts, Epic:Armageddon is conceptually more complex than Warhammer 40,000 due to its higher level of abstraction. In my experience, younger players (under 15, say) who play 40K may not get Epic, as evidenced by the "What?? Devastators only carry missile launchers??" question I keep seeing posted around various forums (it's an abstraction, guys--the missile launcher could be a lascannon). These younger players often bypass Epic in favour of 40K, which is of course fine for GW--so long as these players are buying 40K miniatures and rulebooks, its revenue stream remains secure.

There is a flip-side to this, however: the problem of retaining players as their gaming tastebuds change. I will use my own experience as an example.

Warhammer 40,000: Rogue Trader came out when I was about 14 years old, and myself and a mate of mine went nuts for it. We kept playing well into 2nd Edition, too, but he--always a gamer much more than a hobbyist or painter--eventually became frustrated by the tactical limitations of the game around age 20 and lost interest in 40K. Thankfully, he discovered Epic instead (then called Space Marine), and still plays Epic:Armageddon today--and I can even occasionally get him to play 40K.

The point of this story is that, if Epic had not been available as an alternative system, GW would have lost my mate as a revenue source--probably forever.

I think it is in GW's interests to seek to retain maturing 40K players (the 20- and 30-somethings) who, like my friend, might be looking for something new by transitioning them into Epic--or Aeronautica Imperialis or Battlefleet Gothic (or Space Hulk, for that matter). The universe of the 41st Millennium is as compelling as it ever was; in my experience, it is the gaming system with which people tend to get fatigued.

If I was running GW, that would be part of my player retention strategy: a player looking for something different from 40K (as my friend eventually was) all too easily leaves tabletop gaming entirely, and then ceases to be a source of revenue for GW; whereas, if this player is introduced to an alternative GW system that meets his or her gaming needs, the player remains an on-going source of revenue via both--or even multiple--systems, and one that was cheaply won at that in marketing budget terms.

That's just my 5 cents, of course. At the end of the day, I still get to play 40K and Epic. And Battlefleet Gothic. And Space Hulk. And Dawn of War 2. And Epic 40,000: Final Liberation (yes, I still play that old PC game from time to time--and it's still awesome).

I call that a win-win (win-win-win-win) scenario.

~So what's your take on Specialist Games guys? Important option for the veteran gamers, or useless appendage? What say you?
blog comments powered by Disqus
Blog Widget by LinkWithin

BoLS Followers

 

Product Reviews

Battle Reports

Miniatures Painting

Minis Conversions

BoLS Videos

News and Hobby Topics

abyssal dwarf Academy Adam Adepticon Adeptus Arbites advertisement Aeronautica airbrushing All Voices Anonymous anima tactics Apocalypse armylists Aventine Battle Engines battle reports Battlefleet Gothic battletech beastmen bigred Black Blow Fly black templars Blazing Sun blogging blood angels boardgames BoLS BoLScon BrassScorpion Brent bretonnia Bulwark bushidoredpanda Caldera campaigns chaos daemons chaos dwarfs chaos marines cheating Circle Orboros CoA colossals comics Community Confrontation conversions corporation CrazyRedPraetorian cryx cygnar Daemonhunters daemons of chaos Dark Age dark angels dark eldar dark elves Darkwynn deathguard domination dreadfleet Dukes lounge burp DUST Warfare dwarfs Dystopian Wars editorial eldar elotsip empire Epic EvilEd209 feast of blades FFG field of glory finance flames of war Flashback Friday forgefathers FOW Primer france Fritz FSA FTW Games Gale Force 9 game design geek nation tours Gentleben Germany Goatboy GR00V3R Great Britain grey knights Hell Dorado high elves historicals hobby humor imperial guard Index interview jawaballs Just_Me jwolf khador kingdom death kings of war Kirby Knowledge Bomb KoB Kraggi kromlech Legion lizardmen logo sheets lore LoTR magnets Malifaux mantic maxmini menoth mercenaries Mercer mercs miniatures minions Mkerr Mr. Black necrons news/rumors No Quarter oddball ogre kingdoms orcs/goblins orks orx painting paintrana plastic dudesmen polls Privateer Press project logs Prussians Psyberwolfe puppetswar realgenius Reaper relationships Relic Knights retribution review Rogue Trader RPGs rules Sekhmet Sisters of Battle skaven skorne Soda Pop Soviets space hulk space marines Space Wolves spherewars Spikey Bits Star Wars Strangleweb Tabletop Fix tactics Tau terrain the girl The Painting Corps This Week in 40K Podcasting thunderstruck titans tomb kings tournaments tpm trollkin tutorial tyranids undead United States vampire counts video videogames vietnam wargames wargames gallery WarGamesCon warhammer 40k warhammer fantasy Warlord Warmachine-Hordes warpath warriors of chaos Way of the Wilds Witch Hunters wood elves wrath X vs Y zombies

Masthead

Editor & Publisher: Larry Vela (Bigred)

Writers: Aventine, Black Blow Fly, Brass Scorpion, Brent, BushidoRedPanda, Darkwynn, GentleBen, Goatboy, Hero, Lux, Psyberwolfe, Col. Festus, Fritz, Gar, Grey Death, Jawaballs, Just_Me, Man Boy Genius, McNs, Mr. Black, Paintraina, PsyberWolfe, Rabscutle, Relasine, Spacecurves, SpankyHarrison, Strangleweb, TastyTaste, The Girl, TPM_Blood Angel
Community Managers: Aims, Duke, RealGenius
Photographer/Videographer: AdamHarry, BushidoRedPanda, Minus67