(CyberShadow @ Aug. 17 2006,04:59)
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(iblisdrax @ Aug. 16 2006,23:36)
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The thing that annoys me, however, is the refusal to even consider licensing the Epic scale( or other SG lines, past and present) to another company willing to invest more time in it. ?Perhaps there have been offers to do such things, but the GW license was too high.
GW/SG could never agree to a license of Epic to another company, simply because this would also require an agreement about the copyright involved in the major 40K lines such as the Tau, Tyranids, etc. Any Epic license would have to include the fair use of these terms, images and whole package, and that could open up potential problems and conflicts with 40K.
The bottom line here is simply that GW have decided in some way that not supporting the specialist range (not just Epic) is more profitable for the company than supporting them. It is possible that Epic games suddenly buy into 40K. It is possible that Epic gamers storm away from any further GW products. However, whatever the reason or result from our perspective, this pattern has occured several times in several games (anyone remember the 'six month game lifespan').
My view is that the average player buys a lot of minis in the first few months, and that these purchases drop off as unpainted forces grow and the various army roles are filled by troops. After this, the sales from the player slow down. With this model, it makes for GW to push a game for a year and then drop... even if we dont like it.
As an aside, this topic is something close to everyones heart and therefore there is a risk that tempers will rise. Discussion so far has been exemplary and very well conducted. Keep it up guys.
Hi!
True. GW does and will "purposefully" make games that obsolesce over a 18 month period or less.
I think GW could produce specialist games supported well, that sold well and were not onerous on them, but it is more a question of their marketing philosophy over the last ten years or so that makes supporting such games a problem more than any true administrative hurdle.
I find this discussion very invigorating and thought provoking. My thanks to always, especially tneva for the good hard debate.
Primarch