warspite1
Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008 From: England Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Joseignacio Warspite, I don't recall them having been called useless, but anyway I was not in all the threads. And as you mentioned some could have been somewhat close to calling them useless. What I think, and I guess many other posters would believe, is that: - The books were of a high quality in materials and content, but - It was unnecessary to have them in this format. They could have been PDF perfectly well, as they are in other games. Of course a paper book would have been more comfortable, like Andreas says, but that would increase costs for transport. Paper rulebooks are dying with digitalization. - Because of the size and weight (and maybe the delivery system), the cost of transport was outrageous, this could have been on purpose, not only the books were huge and heavy and could have easily been made in a leaflet format cheaper in printing but they also would have been a lot cheaper in transport. I am speaking here of maybe 30/40 dollars in "transport + taxes for the transport" of those goods. I believe the reason for having these books in these format and with these travel costs is a kind of pact between Matrix, who I think couldn't explain easily to their general public (even though there are reasons for those who know the game development) a game costing 140$, and the wish of ADG that the computer version wouldn't cannibalize the board one, so the price needed to be higher. This is the only sense I can rationalize of this editing policy. warspite1 quote:
Warspite, I don't recall them having been called useless, but anyway I was not in all the threads. And as you mentioned some could have been somewhat close to calling them useless. Exactly - there was a range of comments with the central theme being that the books were an unnecessary, stupid idea. The extra cost of delivery being a particularly sore point. quote:
- The books were of a high quality in materials and content Agreed. They are items of beauty, glossy and with a superb hard cover. The 'weathered' look inside is an excellent idea that adds to their quality. quote:
- It was unnecessary to have them in this format. Were they necessary? Maybe not, but it was Matrix decision and I cannot believe that the idea has gone down that badly or why would they have repeated the idea with WitW? quote:
They could have been PDF perfectly well, as they are in other games. I'm sure they could have used pdf and if so then we would have known no better. But Matrix thought otherwise, and I'm glad they did! quote:
Of course a paper book would have been more comfortable.....Paper rulebooks are dying with digitalization. Exactly. For a boardgame recreation like this, constant reference to rules is so important and having these tomes to hand is most helpful. Apparently for the first time in ages, paper books have outsold digital. Let's hope that trend continues!! quote:
Because of the size and weight (and maybe the delivery system), the cost of transport was outrageous That depends on where you live and what your budget is etc. It was certainly unfortunate for some who paid more than others (iirc Europe was hit worse than the US for example). However, in the context of the game, game time spent playing and budget, the cost was well worth it many, many times over. quote:
I believe the reason for having these books in these format No idea if there is some 'hidden' reason. As far as I am aware Matrix thought this was a premium game and needed premium treatment. If that was the rationale then I say they were 100% spot on. As I say, it is perhaps interesting that WitW had similar treatment. The book seems to have gone down well with that gaming community.
< Message edited by warspite1 -- 11/3/2015 9:27:06 AM >
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