AcasualDream wrote:
It is sad because LoTR is great entrance game for the kids. Easier rules, well known lore, movies to help drive imagination....
I am strong believer in that the gaming portion is really one of the smaller aspects of the hobby. Picking your army, doing the math on the points, building, painting, speculating with friends, These are the things that make up the rest of the hobby, and that requires the kids to build their own forces.
Agreed for the most part. The building/painting of the models is a 50/50 with many people I speak with. Even people that enjoy that part of the hobby find a certain appeal in a pick-up-and-go game that comes with (at least mostly) built and painted models. But the rest of your points are pretty consistent.
AcasualDream wrote:
The price range for that age group (in my mind) is 20-30 dollars. You will always save up for the big items, but you should be able to take your allowance and go add to your army. $60.00 for Knights of Rivendell???
This is the next generation of gamer and I don't see them coming up with GW. Its such a shame
And here you nailed it IMO. I may have spent $25/month on the hobby in the past, for example, and would have spent all that on GW in my LGS. Because that $25 would get me a box full of 24 warriors or a Hero and some paints. Now it's either half the models or, in more and more cases, not enough for a single purchase. So I'd have to wait a second month for actual gratification. But now I can go to another shelf at my LGS and grab a different set of models for that price.
I also used to try to bring new players into SBG and even WotR. But now I wouldn't think of suggesting anyone new look at this particular system. I may still invite new people to play using our existing forces, but I'd tell them up front that it's over priced in my opinion and suggest they really consider their options. Meanwhile I'm pushing some other game systems at people like cheap crack because they are fun and affordable to play...just absolutely unrelated to Middle Earth.