25 minutes ago, Mep said:FFG and its wonderful ambiguous wording. Is the 3rd set at the end of the year or is the core set released at the end of the year? If they at least try to stick to the 4 month schedule then the 3rd set is coming in September (two expansions a year and then the base set at the end of the year). We need an official FFG ruling on what the hell they just said. I doubt they want to go from May to December without a new release. However, I am not sure they can produce enough dice, especially with the awakening reprint to do the 3rd set this year. I still think it may get bumped but I hope not. This means the core set with Last Jedi at the end of the year to correspond with the movie and the one set Disney wants them to print all year. I doubt they mean by the "at the end of the year" their core set with new starters are going to miss out on the holiday shopping season. Disney probably will axe that one and have them hold off on the Rebels set, which will be going into season 4 next year, so plenty of time to capitalize off of it.
So after SoR we will get an Awakening reprint and maybe ????? and just in time for the holiday season and the new movie, we will get a new base set and starters. So the shopping seasons are tax returns, back to school, holidays. Early in the new year is a horrid time to release something.
Why would the production of one set affect the production of another set? Normally, one time print runs would be some more or less at a random factory and there would not be one consistent factory used for all print runs of the same game. This means they could just have two, or even three, contracts out with various companies to have each factory producing a different set to have ready to go if they had tight releases. For example, the factory doing the SoR print run very likely is NOT the factory doing the Kylo/Rey starter reprint and neither of those factories would be he one doing the Awakenings reprint. Those would be three separate contracts all running concurrently, allowing for faster printing of each and more than likely also lower (or at worst equal) production costs.