Pacific wrote:The general consensus was 'well they aren't coming from my store'.
As a long term player of
LotR from 2001 to date and former Mod at TheLastAlliance.com (at the time in question the largest
LotR discussion group/forum), I would concur. Generally speaking (with the very occasional, notable exception)
GW stores were *horrible* places for
LotR gamers in the early noughties. The general hostility to new ideas and people of the dominant
40k crowd was bigoted and thoroughly nasty. That included many, many of the staff who would be outright patronising and mocking, let alone the mouth-breathing fethers who couldn't bear the continued existence of a game that they in their ignorance blamed for the malaise
40k struck in the late 3rd/early 4th edition period. The thought of actually gaming in that environment was repugnant to me and very many of the other folks I spoke to online at that period. The phenomenon was even more noticeable in the US than in the
UK and Europe.
My understanding (anecdotally from many conversations online) was that the vast majority of
LotR players either bought online, or if they absolutely had to, just made very quick forays into the stores to buy stuff and then ran back out as quickly as possible.
Certainly there was/is much less crossover than one would expect between
LotR players and
40k/WFB players - due initially to this perceived hostility, and also due to the significant stylistic differences between
LotR and the other two core systems - many folks liked the "realistic" style of
LotR and its straight-forward and intuitive rules, and disliked the "cartoony" and much more complicated rules of
40k/WFB. Also there is a huge component of
LotR collectors who are simply that and really aren't that interested gaming.
Simply put,
LotR sales and gamers were (and still probably are) totally invisible to store staff and other in-store gamers. Doesn't mean they don't or didn't exist.
Think of this:
GW had no compulsion of squatting beloved titles like BloodBowl and GorkaMorka and so forth. If
LotR didn't sell well do you really think they would keep it going? Forthcoming expected Hobbit-bubble or not? Seriously?
In any case, once the Hobbit-bubble has burst ,in maybe 2 years time (I would expect post the 2nd film DVD release, so that makes it Christmas 2014) then we will see how long their interest in the product line continues. The first bubble was supported largely by the TV advertising and the good deals available with the BGiMe partwork. That isn't going to be available this time around and of course we now have the wonders of Finecast to spoil things as well, so likely the bubble will not be as big nor last as long this time around. If the
LotR line continues much beyond 2014 (or at least y/e May 2015) then we will really see what the ground level support for the game is. And to be honest by that stage it will have survived for 13 years, so surely would be justified as no longer a "new" game, even to the most diehard of
40k players?