SmegmaLord
Mongoose
....for those who dont the answer is.......?
CHRIS
CHRIS
SmegmaLord said:....for those who dont the answer is.......?
GoingDown said:I really don't get it why somebody complains if book is slim and easily readable (=not too small print and well laid with decent empty spaces to make content more easily readable).
Slimmer book should give hint that there is easy and quick rules to play with. At least I wouldn't like at all to get >300 page book just for Core Rules for any RPG.
SmegmaLord said:Okay, so you go to the supermarket and buy a bag of potatos and I come along and help you by taking half of them out. "there you go" I cry "now its even easier for you to get your shopping home!"
What we all want is value for money
msprange said:SmegmaLord said:....for those who dont the answer is.......?
People like hardbacks, whatever the format. . .
Greg Smith said:Isn't it better to have your rulebooks in hardback so that they dont get creased, marked and scuffed from constant use?
Also, how does the English in RQ compare with the English in Cadwallon?
Smegalord: why play MRQ rather than RQ2/3? Because it is available. You won't have to go hunting on ebay for rulebooks and supplements. Because it has been streamlined and simplified, while characters have different options for improvement.
Vadrus said:Unfortunately it can also have another effect as I found when I showed it to my games group last night. The first comment was "Slim ain't it", followed by "Where's the rest of it?" then a barrage of why is it in such large print, why does it have such large gaps amongst the paragraphs, why does it have such large borders, etc, etc.
Dort Onion said:I dont rem the RQ3 (Games Workshop) hardback being any bigger....
Fairly sure it was a 96 page hardback.....
Greg Smith said:Isn't it better to have your rulebooks in hardback so that they dont get creased, marked and scuffed from constant use?
Also, how does the English in RQ compare with the English in Cadwallon?
Smegalord: why play MRQ rather than RQ2/3? Because it is available. You won't have to go hunting on ebay for rulebooks and supplements. Because it has been streamlined and simplified, while characters have different options for improvement.
Dort Onion said:I dont rem the RQ3 (Games Workshop) hardback being any bigger....
Fairly sure it was a 96 page hardback.....
Rurik said:Dort Onion said:I dont rem the RQ3 (Games Workshop) hardback being any bigger....
Fairly sure it was a 96 page hardback.....
The original (AH) RQ3 was five books (2 in the Players box, 3 in the GM box, all in the deluxe box). Total page count was pretty high.
And the binding was way stronger than MRQ! :lol:
(Just kidding on that last part, paper covers barely heavier than the internal pages, stapled. Horrible binding. Very easy to dissassemble and put into page protectors though, as happened to much of my RQ3 stuff).
Lieutenant Rasczak said:
MRQ + Companion = $49.90 full RRP.
Cadwallon = $60 full RRP.
I can get Mongoose Books on discount, so thats an unfair comparison.
Anyway its a different Kettle of fish really, Cadwallon is a 'lost leader' as its designed so you spend loads of cash on Miniatures.
Also, there is a Companion on the way for Cadwallon, plus you need the floorplans, etc, etc . . . . . .
Vadrus said:msprange said:SmegmaLord said:....for those who dont the answer is.......?
People like hardbacks, whatever the format. . .
Actually no they don't or more graphic novels would be in Hardback as they often have similar page count to MRQ but are almost exclusively in paperback as they are seen as 'light-weight' productions.
Walk round Waterstones and you'd be amazed how few hardback volumes there are in general, except for first printings of novels and some textbooks that want to look large and impressive (and have the page count to back it up).
One irony is the only books any of us could think of that were hardbacked and the same size and thickness as MRQ were the comic annuals for Beano, Dandy, etc. Or is the primary school market MRQ's demographic ?
Vadrus
Rocambole said:Lieutenant Rasczak said:
MRQ + Companion = $49.90 full RRP.
Cadwallon = $60 full RRP.
I can get Mongoose Books on discount, so thats an unfair comparison.
Anyway its a different Kettle of fish really, Cadwallon is a 'lost leader' as its designed so you spend loads of cash on Miniatures.
Also, there is a Companion on the way for Cadwallon, plus you need the floorplans, etc, etc . . . . . .
I too find MRQ way too expensive.
MRQ + Companion = 49.90 $ for 216 pages (black & white)
Artesia, Adventures in the Known World = 39.95 for 352 pages (full color)
Exalted 2nd edition = 39.99 $ for 400 pages (full color)
And for 49.90 $, we have have no background.
Vadrus said:Bizarrely my RQ3 books from the boxed set are still intact after campaigns lasting probably about 8 years in total. Though the staples are now rusting and staining the pages :?
Worst RPG ever for falling about was original SLA Industries book, pages fell out when it was first openned :shock: Ended up after two weeks play as a pile of loose pages that were kept in box file.
Vadrus
Dort Onion said:I dont rem the RQ3 (Games Workshop) hardback being any bigger....
Fairly sure it was a 96 page hardback.....