Yes your right I never have DM an D&D 5th RPG game heck I never played one yet, people who don't get to play end up being collectors.
Yes I will be impossable for me to beat Critical Role I would be happy for being on Par with them,
LW
So, it's been about 6 months since you originally created this topic. Have you made any attempts to play in some games, and get some experience under your belt?
D&D is the top RPG partially because they were first, but also because the primarily target the middle 60% of the audience. It would be much easier for a new show to win a loyal audience by targeting an underserved market. Can you do improv comedy? Maybe more focus on romance instead of combat? A game about a thieves guild, or spies, or a merchant empire?
If you are specifically looking for views, and you can guess where the market is going to you can easily beat CR. Will D&D become popular in China or India? They have much bigger potential audiences, but right now they don't play as much D&D let alone watch it on the internet.
As much as I love CR, their campaign setting is vanilla fantasy. Not much different than Forgotten Realms, Greyhawk, etcetra. There are plenty of DMs with more interesting campaign settings who will never win the same sized audience as CR, but provide a "better" product for those who favor a different style campaign setting.
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Yes your right I never have DM an D&D 5th RPG game heck I never played one yet, people who don't get to play end up being collectors.
Yes I will be impossable for me to beat Critical Role I would be happy for being on Par with them,
LW
So, it's been about 6 months since you originally created this topic. Have you made any attempts to play in some games, and get some experience under your belt?
Sorry...what? Are you saying you have never played D&D, but watched critical role, and want to create a product that is comparable to that show?
D&D is the top RPG partially because they were first, but also because the primarily target the middle 60% of the audience. It would be much easier for a new show to win a loyal audience by targeting an underserved market. Can you do improv comedy? Maybe more focus on romance instead of combat? A game about a thieves guild, or spies, or a merchant empire?
If you are specifically looking for views, and you can guess where the market is going to you can easily beat CR. Will D&D become popular in China or India? They have much bigger potential audiences, but right now they don't play as much D&D let alone watch it on the internet.
As much as I love CR, their campaign setting is vanilla fantasy. Not much different than Forgotten Realms, Greyhawk, etcetra. There are plenty of DMs with more interesting campaign settings who will never win the same sized audience as CR, but provide a "better" product for those who favor a different style campaign setting.