EDG said:I've never seen any evidence that the survival of the RPG industry is dependent on gaming stores. You know what they play at game stores nowadays? Card games and Mini games. One of the ones around here has huge card and mini game tournaments every week. But I can't even remember the last time I saw anyone playing an RPG regularly at a store.
I see around me less and less stores selling books and less and less players.
Why no players? No visibility whatsoever in stores. No new players coming in and old players leaving the hobby as natural process.
No players, no sales, no stores(reinforcing the process) and eventually no publishers.
Like I said, I really doubt that there are any game stores that JUST sell RPGs anymore.
If there was even stores that would sell RPG's in a first place. Even if among other stores. But I see less and less those as well. And crucially player base is shrinking, shrinking and shrinking.
So even if publishers stopped selling RPGs through the stores I really doubt that the good stores would even really feel much of a pinch as a result. IMO if a store is only selling RPGs then it deserves to die out.
Stores no. Publishers yes when player base diminished to point of near non-existance. No players, no sales. No stores, no players.
I really really doubt that any internet-savvy publishers nowadays would go out of business if they stop selling stuff at game stores.
When there's no players left anymore to buy whom publishers sell? It works now because there's existing player base but that base is shrinking. Once that base is gone there's no more buyers and that base doesn't grow. The visibility of RPG's is shrinking like there's no tomorrow as the sales go more and more to internet where potential new customers are unlikely to find them except by pure chance.
Heck, a lot of small press publishers sell only through the internet anyway via places like DTRPG.
And why they are small? Because they don't sell much. And how are they going to sell to anybody once there's no customer base to sell upon? RPG companies are mainly living off on pre-internet sale customers who came into the hobby while there was still visibility for RPG's. Now there's currently constantly shrinking player base that loses more members than they get new ones. That is NOT sustainable. Sooner or later publishers are going to get in big problems.