Thanks for the replies...obviously I am in the wrong place however. I have no issue with paying for product, but I get the strong feeling that Paizo is making a cut on these sales...and that is unacceptable.
They may get a licencing fee, just like every other company gets a licencing fee when someone uses their products. I paid to see
Star Wars. If I buy my child a
Star Wars lunch-box, should I complain because I pay more for it than for a plain lunch-box?
They have already been paid for the book...then again for the PDF (that alone is a ripoff)
1) So you think a company which already provides the entire content, sans illustrations, of all its core books for free on the Internet should
also provide the fully-formatted, fully-illustrated electronic versions for free?
2) If you have a subscription to Paizo product lines, you get the PDF versions for free.
and now they want us to pay yet again for the data we already "own" to be useable in thrid party software? They should GLADLY allow other parties to make their product more useful...hell they should probably be paying HL for sending out updates to their customers...not the other way around.
You're not "paying for the data". As has already been explained you can enter the data yourself if you want to. You're paying for
someone else (ie: Lone Wolf staff) to enter the data for you.
I can't quite get my head around why you would think Paizo should be paying another company to make a profit off their licenced material. Should LucasArts be paying the lunch-box maker to slap an R2-D2 picture on it?
If 100% of the purchase price for a "license" goes to HL then MAYBE it is worth it (still doubtful given the extreme costs) but if even a penny of that goes to pay Paizo...no way. That term License is what throws me...its what people usually pay other people for permission to do stuff...like use their product.
The
extreme cost? Are you serious? You'll pay $50 for a game that will last a few hours but you baulk at $30 for Hero Lab?
If you have a problem with Lone Wolf licencing Paizo material then you'd best never buy any kind of licenced merchandise again. Lone Wolf
is paying Paizo for permission to use their product - the Pathfinder rules set - in order to increase the sale of their software.
All said and done, the data is there, it doesn't take long to input (sorry, I can input everything relevant from a single book in a few hours) so paying such high prices just doesn't seem reasonable.
I've been using Hero Lab for years, and it takes me a couple of hours to enter the data for a small splatbook. I have no idea exactly how long it would take to enter the data for, say, the Game Mastery Guide, but it would be a lot longer than a couple of hours.
Just exactly how much per hour is your time worth, and why exactly do you think LW staff time is worth so much less?
I'm still gobsmacked that you think the price is so high, by the way. You've just said it doesn't take you that long to enter the data, so pay $30 for the program and enter your own data.
Either you think it takes too long to enter the data and therefore want someone else to do it, but you don't want to pay them to do it; or you don't think it takes that long and could therefore do it yourself, in which case you think $30 is too expensive.
Which is it?
Possible exception...is every line of text from the books somewhere in that data? I get the impression its only the hard stats...meaning only a small fraction of the contents of each book (some more than others of course)
Then your impression is wrong. I don't know about "every line", but I can run an entire game session from HL without referring to a single book. Rules, clarifications, skill descriptions, full spell descriptions, feats, character classes, monster descriptions, both crunch and fluff, are all there.
Edit to Add: Incidentally, this is far more generous that the vast majority of other companies out there. Paizo is allowing Lone Wolf to essentially create an electronic version of their books, which could actually
reduce sales, and you want them to pay Lone Wolf for the privilege?