Showing posts with label Dungeons and Dragons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dungeons and Dragons. Show all posts

January 12, 2010

Why Not Stay Awhile?

This post will take care of several things I've been wanting to mention, but never took the time to do. Plus, of course, a real post with actual thoughts in it.

First, happy new year to you all. I would say "may it be everything 2009 wasn't", but that would be a huge list of things, so let's say just say "Hope it will be a goodyear" (I never get tyred of that one).

Second, let's all make a round of applause for Lews here (wave to them, don't be shy, they don't bite) who's joining us and will be writing articles alongside yours truly. Lews has his own blog, in french, "Le Nid du Dragon", which I've joined to write articles there too. let's hope the collaboration will be fruitful

Third, because it is relevant to this blog, I did quit my job last month, because it was far from satisying and stifled my need to create things. For the next two years, my goal is now to become a freelance board game designer. So you might will see articles on that kind of things here. It has already started some months ago, if you have been paying attention.
Suffice to say, the next two years should be very interesting... It will not be easy, but it should be fun.

That's it for our announcements. On to our subject, and that subject will be customer retention. And Marketing.
I've recently purchased back issues from a board game magazine (Plato magazine, which you may or may not know) as I've only recently discovered them and like their writing style. No, that's wrong. The incentive for getting the back issues was because they offered not 1, but 3 board games with it. From a rather huge list, I might add. Happy with my purchase, I talked about it with one of the person that made me discover said magazine, and saw him make a face.
"I've been a subscriber to their magazine almost since day one. Loyal. What do I get for it? Jack. You come along innocently, have now almost all the issues I have, and 3 games to boot..."
"Oh, I can see how you might have issues with that..."

Pun nonwithstanding, it got me thinking. Subscription-based magazines tend to try to attract new people by offering incentives, but completely forget about their current subscribers, as though persuaded that they would be loyal for life. Now, how do companies entice people to come, stay, or come back? Time for some research! Some necroblogging later, I have a number of rewards and incentives types.

1) Veteran Rewards



The term I'm using comes from Tabula Rasa (again), who had something called the veteran rewards, fluff things that you got after you had been a subscriber for some time: you can see the rewards for three months, six months (looking like Richard Garriot... Now that will boost troops' morale!) and nine months of fighting the Thrax.
City of Heroes has such a program too. hey, look, so does Aion.

Must be an NCSoft thing. At least they seem to understand the value of long-time subscribers. It sadly didn't save TR, though.

DDO has another take on this: for each month you are subscribing, and your reward is Turbine Points, which you can use to unlock parts of the game once you decide to cancel your subscription. Be a subscriber long enough, and you might as well have purchased a lifetime subscription.

So, the longer you subscribe, the more things you have that differentiate you from a new player, even if he can play 40 hours a day and you can't.

2) Anniversary Rewards



Not yours, but the game's anniversary. I found these two articles from the Ancient Gaming Noob about WoW and Everquest 2. And this for LOTRO second anniversary.
These rewards are only for people who are current subscribers at the time of the event, whether they've been subscribing for 1 hour or for 5 years.

3) Referee Rewards

If you can get more people to play the game you're playing, the company might offer you some rewards for the task.
Sometimes, the more people you get, the more rewards befall you. Sometimes, the rewards are split.


4) Homecoming Rewards



The reward for coming back to the game. Most of the time, it's a free coupon to play the game a few days. It's a bit like when Steam makes a full game available for an entire Week-end.
The goal here is to make lost subscribers see that the game has changed, in the hope that their tastebuds will make them want more.
If anyone knows of a game that offer "substantial" rewards for coming back, I'm interested, because now that I think about it, the coupon is free of charge. Or, you might see it as a reward for having subscribed in the past (good times, good times).

5) Preorder Reward

You are rewarded for getting the game before it has had a chance to be reviewed, and you have only seen some beta screenshots (or been in the beta). A reward based on faith, so to say. Congratulations, a (would be) early adopter is you ! I won't even bother researching the subject, just pick an MMORPG at random from the last 3 years, and you'll see plenty of them. Depending on the platform, your reward will be different, so you'll have to make your research here.

Yeah, so?
  
Many kind huh? And I'm not even talking of what you can get for F2P games where you send money, à la Kingdom of Loathing... So, online games do cater more to their customers than magazines.

But... Only one catering is for current, long standing customers. It's (mostly; see below) comprised of fluff, which is fine, because you shouldn't get a gaming advantage for time spent paying and not time spent playing, IMO. Now that is another can of worms I am not opening. For now...
All the others are oriented towards getting new customers. Or getting back lost ones. Which maybe they wouldn't have lost if the game had been finished before getting rushed - oooo, can of worms, again ! They're just everywhere.

So what? Why am I bothered by these rarities ? Well, a well known motto is that "getting new customers is [insert favorite number] more expensive than keeping existing ones". It should be a given to care for them, then, no?
But a motto is easy to say, and I can't really give expenses numbers to back it up.

Consider EVE online. There is a reward for staying subscribed, and that is skill points. You constantly gain them overtime. So, someone who has been p(l)aying for years will have more than someone who has been playing 24/24 last month. This gives them an edge on the field, although it's more of a multifaced edge than a Two-Handed Sword of Extreme Slashiness, as each skill has a maximum level reachable. It's not gamebreaking, as someone who has paid less, but played more will have earned more money (I hope).
The result is that people have a reason to continue paying even if their interest in the game has temporarily waned. Yes, there are people who leave the game, but EVE has been growing organically since its opening, garnering more than 300k paying customers to this day.

Now consider WoW. Or Everquest. When someone's interest in the game has waned, he has no real interest in continuing to pay (laziness excluded): if he does not play for 6 months, in one case, he will have lost 6*month cost of the game for no benefits, in the other, he won't have lost the money, and still no benefits.
In EVE, 6 months of skill growth is still something to keep in mind.

True, it won't save a game that lacks basic fun, like Tabula Rasa, which found its fun months after its grand debuts. Months too late. But it will make people think twice before unsubscribing. And think twice in a good way. Not think twice in a "oh-god-they-want-me-to-write-a-6500-words-essay-about-why-I'm-leaving-and-make-3-phone-calls,one-of-them-in-India,let's-just-stay-subscribed" way.
See the difference? One will make people talk about they like the game, just not now, to their friend, the other will make them bitch to their friends. Guess which one...

March 5, 2008

Mourning for Gygax, D&D style

A plain, where ordinarily the wind blows fiercely, but today strangely quiet.
A plain, normally inhabited only by insects and the restless spirits of those that fell on this bloodthirsty ground, but today black with people.
A plain, whose groune is ordinarily crackled by the sun, today trampled bare by the myriad of feet that have been on it for hours.

In this crowd, numerous and diverse creatures are visible. here an Ankheg near a huge Orc. There, an ebony scaled dragon lifts pixies on its wings, so that they can see. between all of these creatures, Fighters, Priests, Thieves, more than the eye can see.
The skies themselves are black: Devas, Balors, Mages from everywhere float gently, practically motionless.

Not a sound. Not a move. No one hits his neighbour, nor looks at him with envy, hunger. No one visits the pockets of anyone. Far left, even, a Lich gives a Pelor's Priest a piece of her robe to dab his eyes, wet with water.

Everyone's attention is centered on a single point, in the center of the battlefield. A huge Pyre has been set, upon which a human bodyu rests, in a strange multigarbed flower shirt, incongruous among this throng. The atmosphere is solemn...

A Huge Gold Dragon steps forward, dips its head respectfully, before roaring. On its neck, a man, in Archmage robes, better known to anyone as Elminster, speaks, after a little Castvoice (level 2) spell

"Thou... Created us, Gary Gygax. Thou started... Something that went far , more far than you thought it could go. Thou created... A child that will survive you. Thou changed the lives of thousands of childrens. And grown-ups. Thou enabled many to live their dreams. And here you leave us now, and no Resurrection, Raise dead, Miracle or Wish will make you come back."

Sobs are heard from everywhere. A gelatinous cube trembles like jelly. A rust monster chitters sadly. No one can see what the Invisible Stalker does.

"But verily, thou just shifted planes. And we have faith thy will conquer them, with your bag of dices +5/+8 against ignorant, your flowery Shirt of Resistance +4, your Glasses of X-Ray, Infravision, Ultravision, True Seeing and your never-emptying Beard.
May Thy Dices Never Roll 1, my old friend!"

A pause. A long pause, as each and every creature and character on the plain pays its hommage to the creator of Dungeons & Dragons, the first Roleplaying Game, one by one. Various objects are stacked, relics, artefacts, magic items, rare spell components.

Then, the crowd parts from the pyre, and in one move, fiery breathn Melf's meteor (level 9), Fireballs (level 3) are launched on the pyre.

"And now, in his honor, Battle Royale! May the PX flow like water!"

And the crowd roars...


Gary Gygax died today at the age of 69, guys...
http://blog.wired.com/underwire/2008/03/report-gary-gyg.html
http://cbs4denver.com/entertainment/gygax.dungeons.dragons.2.669157.html

*******************************************************

Une plaine, normalement balayée par les vents, mais aujourd'hui d'un calme plat.
Une plaine, normalement habitée uniquement par quelques insectes, et par les esprits perdus de ceux tombés au combat sur ce sol assoiffé de leur sang, à présent noire de monde.
Une plaine, au sol normalement craquelé par le soleil, à présent rendu uniforme par les pieds qui la foulent depuis des heures.

Dans cette foule, des créatures éparses et nombreuses sont visibles. Ici, un Ankheg cotoit un gigantesque orc, là, un dragon aux écailles d'ébène porte des pixies sur son aile afin qu'ils puissent mieux voir. Et au milieu, une foule de Guerriers, de Prêtres, de Voleurs.
Les cieux eux mêmes sont noirs de monde, Devas, Balors, Mages de toute sorte flottent, pratiquement immobiles.

Pas un ne bouge. Pas un ne frappe son prochain, pas plus que ne le regarde avec avidité. Pas un ne fait les poches de son voisin. On voit même une liche tendre un morceau de sa robe à un prêtre de Pelor dont les yeux coulent sans s'arrêter.

L'attention est concentrée sur un point, au centre de ce champ de bataille. Un immense bucher a été mis en place, sur lequel repose un humain dans une chemise à fleurs multicolore qui semble incongru dans cet environnement. L'atmosphère est solennel...

Un immense dragon aux écailles dorées s'approche, s'incline lentement, profondément avant de rugir. Sur son cou, un homme en longue robe d'Archimage, au nom d'Elminster, prend la parole après avoir lancé un sort de Portevoix (niv 2).

"Tu nous as créé, ô Gary Gygax. Tu... as lancé un mouvement qui est allé bien au delà de tout ce que tu pouvais espéré. Tu as créé... Un enfant qui te survivra. Tu as... Changé la vie de milliers d'enfants. Et d'adultes. Tu as permis de vivre des rêves. Tu nous quittes à présent, et aucun sort de résurrection, raise dead, miracle, ou même voeu ne pourra te faire revenir"

Des sanglots se font entendre un peu partout. Un cube gélatineux tremble comme de la gelée anglaise. Un monstre de rouille chitter (??). Nul ne peut voir ce que fait le Chasseur Invisible.

"Tu as juste changer de plan, et nous te faisons confiance pour les conquérir, armés de ton sac de dés +5/+8 contre les incroyants, de ta chemise à fleur +4 de résistance, de tes lunettes à rayons X, d'infravision, d'ultravision et de vision véritable, et de barbe de garde manger. Que tes dés ne fassent jamais 1, mon ami!"

Une pause. Une longue pause, pendant laquelle chaque personne sur cette plaine vient rendre hommage au créateur de Donjons & Dragons, le premier jeu de rôle... Des objets divers et variés sont entassés autour du pyre, artefacts, reliques, objets magiques, composants divers.

Puis les gens s'écartent, et d'un seul mouvement, souffles enflammés, météores de Melf (Niv 9), boules de Feu (niv 3) tombent sur le pyre, l'enflammant.

"Et maintenant, en son honneur, Battle Royale! Que les PX coulent à flots!"

Et un profond rugissement emplit la plaine...


Gary Gygax est mort à 69 ans hier, les gars...
http://blog.wired.com/underwire/2008/03/report-gary-gyg.html
http://cbs4denver.com/entertainment/gygax.dungeons.dragons.2.669157.html