Seriously?

By Peacekeeper_b, in Star Wars: Edge of the Empire Beta

$30 and undoubtedly shipping for a play test manual? Any interest I had in this has evaporated. Sorry.

The $20,- Only War pdf Playtest was fine by me, this is a bit too much…

Santiago said:

The $20,- Only War pdf Playtest was fine by me, this is a bit too much…

Agreed, I lsot faith in FFGs 40K line a while back (around Black Crudade's release) but was willing to spend $20 on a PDF I could print out, mark in, and so forth, but not so much $30 plus shipping for a book that will one day probbaly be a "collector's item" unless, of course, you marked in it.

PDF please.

Peacekeeper_b said:

Santiago said:

The $20,- Only War pdf Playtest was fine by me, this is a bit too much…

Agreed, I lsot faith in FFGs 40K line a while back (around Black Crudade's release) but was willing to spend $20 on a PDF I could print out, mark in, and so forth, but not so much $30 plus shipping for a book that will one day probbaly be a "collector's item" unless, of course, you marked in it.

PDF please.

And at least Only War also had art in it.

Peacekeeper_b said:

Peacekeeper_b said:

Santiago said:

The $20,- Only War pdf Playtest was fine by me, this is a bit too much…

Agreed, I lsot faith in FFGs 40K line a while back (around Black Crudade's release) but was willing to spend $20 on a PDF I could print out, mark in, and so forth, but not so much $30 plus shipping for a book that will one day probbaly be a "collector's item" unless, of course, you marked in it.

PDF please.

And at least Only War also had art in it.

Oh, and by the way, you cant go lower than $11.05 on shipping, making this a $40 book.

Peacekeeper_b said:

Oh, and by the way, you cant go lower than $11.05 on shipping, making this a $40 book.

Shooting yourself in the foot, FFG style.

So $40 to play an incomplete version of this game, that gains me nothing towards the final product, AND doesn't allow us to play Jedi as player characters? WTF? Count me out! Anyone that pays for the priviledge to Beta test something, as opposed to being paid or at the very least granted access and some form of future reward, is out of thier gaming mind. IMHO.

Only War Beta is fair. You pay 20 only because you get the game early and you get a full coupon for the full version down the road. That screams buy me as I feel like I lost nothing.

This book in the other hand… You want me to pay for the book with no coupon on the full version which is bad enough. Now I have pay shipping on top of it which is more bad icing on this bad cake. It is just to much and not very smart if you ask me. I like stars wars as much as the next guy, but come on what you are selling looks like a rip off. Not only that, but you proven to have a smarter way to do betas while still making cash with Only War.

JTekarian said:

So $40 to play an incomplete version of this game, that gains me nothing towards the final product, AND doesn't allow us to play Jedi as player characters? WTF? Count me out! Anyone that pays for the priviledge to Beta test something, as opposed to being paid or at the very least granted access and some form of future reward, is out of thier gaming mind. IMHO.

Huh? There are Force rules in the book, so you can play Force users - maybe not on the level of The Force Unleashed, or the prequel trilogy, but the likes of Luke in the main trilogy are possible, from what I've heard.

This is basically the same as the printed version of the Pathfinder beta, and there wasn't all that much complaining about that, from what I remember.

What happened to the days of filling out a form that included your RPG experience and then being chosen to playtest the game and signing a NDF on behalf of your gaming group. Being sent the game via PDF for free and then playing and sending in session reports and questions pertaining to the rules and how they work in game? I have playtested a few RPG's that went to print for companies and had my name in them. It was a privilege to be chosen to help round out a soon to be finished product. This PAYING to playtest destroys the very concept. How about you PAY the people playtesting. very backwards FFG. I expect better from you!

CanadianPittbull said:

What happened to the days of filling out a form that included your RPG experience and then being chosen to playtest the game and signing a NDF on behalf of your gaming group. Being sent the game via PDF for free and then playing and sending in session reports and questions pertaining to the rules and how they work in game? I have playtested a few RPG's that went to print for companies and had my name in them. It was a privilege to be chosen to help round out a soon to be finished product. This PAYING to playtest destroys the very concept. How about you PAY the people playtesting. very backwards FFG. I expect better from you!

They still do the closed playtesting stuff - I know because I've been doing it for the 40k RPGs since Rogue Trader was released in 2009, and as Only War shows, they did the closed playtesting (see the last pages of the PDF, the playtester list, including my name, is there), but they know that hundreds of people are more likely to spot problems than about 20 people.

It's also not that crazy an idea - you could buy printed copies of the Pathfinder beta when that was being playtested, and I don't remember people arguing about that. It's a shame it's not out on PDF too, but I've heard that's something LucasArts dictated (whether that's true or not, I can't say).

That's cool. I just think paying to play a Beta seems weird, at least at that price point.

MILLANDSON said:

This is basically the same as the printed version of the Pathfinder beta, and there wasn't all that much complaining about that, from what I remember.

The PDF for the Pathfinder Alpha/Beta, if I recall though, was free, and the book was optional for those who prefered that option.

Seems a shame. I know a lot of people who skipped the WotC era of Star Wars and kept with WEG editions waiting to see what future versions of Star Wars would look like. In the few people I've spoken to in that crowd now, the opinion seems to be that this feels like an unfortunate cash grab for what FFG knows is going to be a license to print money.

How much do you think is fair for a 224 page, full-color softbound book with all the rules in it?

$20?

$10?

Free?

I understand people not wanting to get it (I'm waiting until there is a finished product, myself), but if you do buy this you are actually getting $30 worth of stuff.

Much as it is "bad form" in one perspective to have people pay to play a sort of public beta, let me toss in a couple of comparative perspectives from outside of RPG play.

If you are a video gamer on Playstation 3, you can have Playstation Plus, which is a paid service. Part of the draw to that paid service, especially early on, was early access to betas of various games. Granted, the betas were "free" with the subscription, but the subscription itself had its cost. It isn't unheard of to that extent.

More specifically to Star Wars, though, a collector would view this situation as an opportunity, not "bad form." For a couple of years now, I have been receiving advance copies of Star Wars books from Del Rey, and back in the first couple of years of the Wizards of the Coast RPG, I was receiving advance copies of those as well. These were essentially review copies, at no cost, pending reviewing and whatnot. Now, a few of those have been "unfinished" versions like what FFG seems to be doing with "Edge of the Empire." When it comes to the novels, these "advance uncorrected proofs" (often just called ARCs for Advance Review Copy, even though some are finished and these are specifically unfinished) are something that are produced in limited numbers and acquired only through being a reviewer or if a reviewer sells them later online. As a collector, I have often considered adding to my own personal collection of "uncorrected proof" copies by picking up some being sold by other reviewers when those items are from before I began receiving them. I'd gladly pay for the ability to add those "unfinished" versions to my own collection due to their limited availability and the oddball nature of them among an Expanded Universe library.

In the case of Edge of the Empire, FFG is basically condensing that down and cutting out the middle man. Rather than sending out unfinished test copies to a few people for review, then those few putting them up for sale, then collectors buying those online, FFG is making it possible for those who want that kind of unfinished, time-limited release version to get them straight from the source, rather than having to buy on the aftermarket or get onto a comped reviewer list.

If the price is a major issue for some (and, hey, even I was shocked to find the total cost with minimum shipping to be over $40 in the U.S.), then that could be a decent way of using simple supply and demand to limit the number of betas out "in the wild" before the finished, official releases hit the market. The more people balk at the price tag, the smaller the beta release, and the more the finished version, rather than this version, will be dominant in the marketplace (both consumer level and aftermarket) once the finished version is released.

I myself do not see an issue here.They seem to be allowing some folks a taste of what the rules will be like, the price seems in line with a full color 244 page small print run book. No one is forcing you to buy this and honestly the price is not bad for what it is.

*waves Lightsaber around maniacally cackling while shooting Force Lightning out of my hand* :D I am out of my mind. I'm ordering two copies of this…It will be handy having two copies around a table and doing group character creation… and 224 pages full color of game mechanics that are pretty much finished… all that is not in it is the final art and the Fluff about the Outer Rim and some planets and stuff… I'm stoked.

I ordered this as soon as I heard it was available. Not so many years ago, I also ordered the print version of the Pathfinder beta and got a tremendous amount of use out of it gamewise as well as the pleasure of just being able to soak up the work Paizo had done on 3.5 in the meantime. With that experience in mind, snapping up this book was a no brainer.

Wow, yeah, I've played no fewer than 4 different Star Wars RPGs and ported more than a few other systems over to run games in that setting, and I've play tested for a few other companies, so I'd have liked to get in on Playtesting for this - but there is no way in hell I'm going to Pay for the Privilege of playtesting a pen and paper game.

This isn't like a computer game where the interface is purely available online and so you're paying for the opportunity to get exclusive access to that world before someone else … a Pen and Paper game occurs chiefly in our imaginations and I don't need to pay a subscription to get there. A sneak peak at mechanics which will probably be altered later, little art, poor layout and bad editing is not worth paying for.

I'd have donated my time and my gaming group, (which has been playing a SW game with another system for some time, as it happens) but I'll let some other sucker pay for an unfinished product.

No kidding. I would feel like a sucker if I bought this. Is it worth the paper and ink in that book. Maybe with all the work that has gone into it, but it could had been done better. They could had given you a coupon in saying if you bought this book you get that much off from the finish core book. Maybe a autograph by the team would be nice even if they didn't personally signed it themselves. If they did that, then it would really stand out as a limited edition book.

It is just to me a unfinished work that you are asking me to pay you for. It is like you did some of your homework and expect a A+ from me. Not happening. Only War beta got away with it because it was basicly buy now and get twenty off when the core book pdf comes out.

*tsk tsk tsk* Your faith is lacking unbelievers…

Stacie_GmrGrl said:

It will be handy having two copies around a table and doing group character creation… and 224 pages full color of game mechanics that are pretty much finished…

I've been internally debating, and that actually seems like the best, or perhaps only justifiable, reason to get this beta. At least without holding it in my hands, reading enough to know if it's gonna be good or not. I few post-it notes come full release and this beta-baby can be up to speed for players, and cheaper than having multiple corebooks.

Still, **** Lucas Licensing for the whole no PDF thing. Whatev, I'm gonna stop myself from ranting more… fer a while.

Thank you, Stacie_GmrGrl, a very excellent point you have made, in my opinion.

Still gotta check enough of the rules to see if it's worth it, though. Time will tell, it seems.

**** it all to hell!

I bought the **** BETA - I hate the fact i had to use 55 dollars to buy a beta, **** Lucas for not allowing pdfs' why! I want to have my whole collection on an Pad… I bet its being scanned and uploaded somewhere as we speak…

But yeah, I ordered the **** book, and it better be frigging awesome with rules that really fit the setting! Support it all the way - and if the Beta is good, well then my group might order the finished product when its ready..

Oh I hate this cynic world :-p

KjetilKverndokken said:

**** it all to hell!

I bought the **** BETA - I hate the fact i had to use 55 dollars to buy a beta, **** Lucas for not allowing pdfs' why!

Now I am not afraid for FFG's future at all, because they can merely churn out betas and sell them. And shelling out 55 bucks for that, no less….

Anybody else think it's weird that a core rulebook, especially the first one to be released, should not only be intrinsically tied to a specific era of the Star Wars mythos, but to a specific part of the Galaxy?

I also don't really get why Age of Rebellion didn't come out first. I always thought the Rebels were like, the main heroes of the Original Trilogy, with the fringers and bounty hunters being more of a sideshow.

Anyway, I wish I could know more about this product before dropping money on it, but I suppose that would inherently defeat the purpose in this case.