Wizards claims that most players don't play or buy their cards in FLGSs, but they underestimate the impact of the players that do. The strongest ambassadors for the game are those that are most engaged with the game (ie, events & community) 5/x
-
Pokaż ten wątek
-
So you combine lower margins, lower retail sales, and a focus on digital game play and you gave a recipe for systemic collapse. As stores get squeezed out or opt out, cards become less useful for organized play... aka consumer confidence in Magic drops 6/x
1 odpowiedź 4 podane dalej 56 polubionychPokaż ten wątek -
Consumer confidence is a huge selling point for Magic... "you can spend $100s on this game and play all these places!" Is the very backbone of Magic's success. How many sets of golf clubs would people buy if there were no public golf courses? 7/x
2 odpowiedzi 9 podanych dalej 98 polubionychPokaż ten wątek -
The history of TCGs is paved with games that people loved fervently but couldn't find other players for. FLGS retailers talk and they've been beating the same drum for the last few years "DIVERSIFY AWAY FROM MAGIC" with many choosing to drop Magic events entirely. 8/x
1 odpowiedź 3 podane dalej 67 polubionychPokaż ten wątek -
If Wizards treats Magic through Amazon the same way they do their other IPs (D&D books are often sold at less than $1 above retailers' cost for example), we'll see a lot fewer "Magic shops" which results in less players, less play opportunities, and less Magic. 9/x
2 odpowiedzi 5 podanych dalej 62 polubionePokaż ten wątek -
This whole situation reeks of Hasbro grasping at straws to cover the lost sales from one of their largest buyers closing up shop (Toys R Us). The suits see Magic as indiscernable from Monopoly, just look at their stockholder reports. 10/x
2 odpowiedzi 7 podanych dalej 103 polubionePokaż ten wątek -
W odpowiedzi do @GoingMadlem
It's big for me to see what they price the product at. If they sell boxes for $100 instead of MSRP there really won't be any reason to ever buy from another store again. It's going to kill a lot stores that are just getting by on the back of Magic.
1 odpowiedź 0 podanych dalej 0 polubionych -
W odpowiedzi do @_Pomegrant
Yeah the scariest part is the precedent they set with D&D. We get $49.95 book for $26.47 cost. They regularly put them on sale at prices under $30 with "sales" taking them even lower. We could honestly see booster boxes at $80-85 with free prime shipping
1 odpowiedź 0 podanych dalej 0 polubionych -
W odpowiedzi do @GoingMadlem
No store will ever be able to compete with this. It will bring the whole store/play structure down completely. It has terrible implications.
1 odpowiedź 0 podanych dalej 2 polubione -
W odpowiedzi do @_Pomegrant @GoingMadlem
Hasbro only cares about short term gains. You see how they already destroyed the standard booster economy by completely devaluing their product for brief sales increase for ultra rares. It's just nearsighted money men looking to save their jobs.
1 odpowiedź 0 podanych dalej 0 polubionych
Quarter to quarter... year over year sales increase at any cost.
Wydaje się, że ładowanie zajmuje dużo czasu.
Twitter jest przeciążony lub wystąpił chwilowy problem. Spróbuj ponownie lub sprawdź status Twittera, aby uzyskać więcej informacji.