1 hour ago, BlindSamurai13 said:From a business standpoint, what is FFG's main priority; introducing a new audience over an established audience, maintaining the established audience over a new audience, or both?
Anyone who they might potentially lose because they don't incorporate every single element good or bad of the universe from the get go... or at all... and don't follow up Onyx which was set up to be a final story after which there really wouldn't be anywhere left for the story to go... well, there just aren't needed. But most fans will jump straight in regardless even if they are griping all the way.
The initial premise for the initial set was easy.
"8 gods fell to earth following the same basic premise of Greek mythology. They formed a new empire with the humans who were on earth. A 9th fell to hell and came to try to destroy the land, 7 heroes chosen by the gods who formed the empire destroyed him allowing the empire to be at peace for 1000 years. Now those 1000 years are drawing to a close and one of the 7 clans betrayed the emperor, killing him and his family and seizing control of the capital. With no emperor on the throne, the clans have no one keeping them at peace and now to go all-out war throwing the empire into chaos."
Its not the simplest of premise, but the premise of basically... some mythological things happened in ancient times, there has been nothing worth noting for 1000 years, now someone gets greedy and throws everything out of balance. Each of the clans is color-coded and has a basic theme, but there is a lot left for player imagination and the result of the story is not clear.
Onyx is a considerably more complicated starting position requiring the explanation of dozens of elements that are just... more nonsense the harder you think about it. It is built on designer-fiat and plot-hole. Worse.... if you understand that "and then everyone dies, the end" is not a possible outcome of the story, it can only go in two ways.... either the samurai defeat the largest challenge imaginable , take back their empire and everyone lives happily ever after.... or they spend the next many generations building a new empire.
Which... actually, is to say, if the starting point is "hundred of years later" you could very well start the game off with a fairly clean slate. Everything from Lotus to Onyx can simply be explained away with "The old empire got taken over by evil demon guys 500 years ago and no one has heard from it ever since" and the clans could imaginably have rebuilt themselves in some form over that many generations.
57 minutes ago, Obscene said:I do believe it is both. And I do think you can reboot the universe to an earlier time period with out redacting future plot points that have happened(that were good) and still allow player input in the story line as well.
I know they have done some limited experimentation with this in A:NR and GoT.
I have a question to the the vets of the IP/community, what was the actual lead time in story line input. For instance, whatever tournament that was won or system that came to a conclusion that allowed players to affect the story line, how long did it take before you saw that in product?
Well, sure. If there are any things that happened in the game that you want to keep (Yasuki joining the Crab, Agasha joining the Phoenix and being replaced by the Tamori, etc.) then you can go ahead and just say those things happened a lot earlier. Or even that the final division of families in clans had always been the case.
Maybe there was never any "Wasp Clan" or "Centipede Clan" but those were always families within the "Mantis".
As for when storyline choices actually showed up? Well, big ones-- for the most part-- came out 1-2 sets later, so 6 to 9 months. Although there were a couple cases where it was surprising just how the very next set seemed to have card flavor text that supported the decided tournament result despite the fact that they came out way too soon after the tournament to think they had time to prepare. (For instance, the final Gold Edition tournament decided which of the Winds would be emperor... and somehow the Diamond set that came out shortly after had cards that, at least in flavor text, acknowledged the choice and there were no cards in the set that suggested that any other candidate had won.)
But that is talking about the cards. If by "product" you include the online weekly stories, there were cases where that would come out the very next day!