Sithious wrote:
Michaelc wrote:
I guess that's "every single time" except the most recent?
I don't want to argue with you. But often they don't mention any systems. That is not a negative. In the 2011 press release by WB about the license extension was all positive and talking about it now Third Core System...
Michaelc wrote:
I doubt the stores who choose not to stock the Hobbit were doing so out of ignorance. The half dozen independents who DID carry stock in my city did NOT move much of it until they slashed prices to clear it out.
I cannot pretend to know what happens at every store....
...
But I still would not take sales at any 1 store or even a dozen and pretend to know what actual sales are for Hobbit and more important than sales is profit
Please forgive me for not reading your preceding post carefully - I didn't realise you're talking about the whole ~15year history of the SBG as opposed to just the last ~3years of the Hobbit Era which I was referring to.
However given the context of the thread - the likelihood of additional
Hobbit releases - what has happened in the LotRs era doesn't seem relevant, except as a benchmark to gauge what is happening NOW in the Hobbit era.
I would agree that the anecdotal sales of a handful of stores is not a solid indication of how the line is selling and that no one outside of GW really knows for sure what the numbers are.
HOWEVER in conjunction with OTHER indicators it is possible to advance a reasonably supported theory:
A. In the LotRs bubble era SOME people might have said the LotRs wasn't selling but the huge spike in GW revenue, attributed by the CEO directly to the LotRs, and the massive continued support to the range following the last movie tended to indicate different. During the Hobbit on the otherhand, GW profits have continued to drop despite massive slashes in services, and massive increases in price. That they may have referred positively to the SBG *before* the hobbit was released isn't a surprise, but the fact the CEO most recently refers to the SBG as a "rapidly declining exception" AFTER release isn't really a mixed signal.
B. Support has decreased from a load of plastics for troops that barely had a part in the movie (MW Palace Guard, Warriors of Dale and Erebor, Grimhammers) to finecast or (so far) nothing for troops that are actually prominent in the film (MW Elves, Gundabad Orcs, Lake Town Militia, Iron Hill Dwarfs). In other words the reverse of the LotRs trend which saw the range start as mostly metal, then balloon into plastics as it took off. Similarly GW released the third hobbit book "free" rather than trying to charge for it.
C. The range is being allowed to disappear as it goes out of stock. In the case of some of the more obscure collectible models it's hardly the end of the world. However some fairly important models as well as several of the army books are also gone. Given the price of some of these models on Ebay, GW could be making money by doing short production runs of the OOP models. However they don't seem interested in doing so.
Now that's not to say there aren't arguments supporting continued support:
1. The 2014 financial report did not include BoFA sales and it's possible, indeed likely that sales would peak following the BoFA in much the same way that LotRs reached it peak in the year or so following RotK.
2. The licence has rumoured to have been extended - which may mean continued support, or may just mean they wanted a few more years to try and sell off the remaining stock and recoup something.
3. It's rumoured the licence *requires* GW to release product for it's duration. In which case saving the Iron Hills dwarfs to be released later to fulfill contractual obligations rather than have to sculpt something new makes sense. However it was also strongly rumoured that Smaug wasn't going to be released because WB was insisting it be made unfeasibly large...
4. Smaug sales. GW generated a fair amount of revenue from Smaug which may encourage them to take a chance with more product.
Countering 1 & 4 however is D. The LotRs bubble. Even supposing the BoFAs as a whole sold very well, I would speculate that GW would be expecting the bubble this time around and be very hesitant devoting additional resources to the range without the immediacy of the movies supporting it and
E. LotRs was originally picked up in part to avoid another company acquiring the licence and making a product to compete with WHFB. Given that GW is primarily concerned with it's own IPs, it may not want to release further products to compete with the Warhammer Bubblantasy Battles reboot rumoured to be in the works.
I'm not trying to be negative, just realistic. There is a good chance, regardless of what we fans may want, that GW will do little or nothing. I would rather expect the worse and be pleasantly surprised, than live in hope of something that may never come.
Should I be proved wrong I look forward to reading your "I told you so post" in the future.