Posted: Sun Oct 13, 2002 3:10 pm
Well to be sure, yep, they could be spending their money on worse things.
I would never pull a kid out of a hobby based solely on it being expensive.
Then again. If my son gets an interest in Warhammer, you can bet he will walk his legs off with a paper route to buy them.
I will support his enthusiasm, I will even encourage it. But it will be a cold day in hell before I support Citadel passively with MY money..
Oh and don't think the price "doesn't" bother the kids eh. I have heard the comments been in the stores known the players.
A the hobby has a low retention level for a reason,
and
B try getting a buddy into it when you tell him the cost involved.
Those kids are not dumb, they know the value of a buck.
The ones playing Warhammer are not always there as a result of pure choice. Remember, Wargaming is the hobby of the loser wacko, anti social geek (no I don't see it that way of course), but take a close look at the kids next time.
They is us. We is them.
You won't find cheerleaders and jocks playing Warhammer (not sure if that is a good thing or a bad thing hehe).
I think if my son demonstrated the slightest hint of interest in Warhammer, I would be inclined to "rescue" him with some decent miniatures and try to get him into real military miniatures gaming. Same costs, better models, more rewarding simulations.
I would never pull a kid out of a hobby based solely on it being expensive.
Then again. If my son gets an interest in Warhammer, you can bet he will walk his legs off with a paper route to buy them.
I will support his enthusiasm, I will even encourage it. But it will be a cold day in hell before I support Citadel passively with MY money..
Oh and don't think the price "doesn't" bother the kids eh. I have heard the comments been in the stores known the players.
A the hobby has a low retention level for a reason,
and
B try getting a buddy into it when you tell him the cost involved.
Those kids are not dumb, they know the value of a buck.
The ones playing Warhammer are not always there as a result of pure choice. Remember, Wargaming is the hobby of the loser wacko, anti social geek (no I don't see it that way of course), but take a close look at the kids next time.
They is us. We is them.
You won't find cheerleaders and jocks playing Warhammer (not sure if that is a good thing or a bad thing hehe).
I think if my son demonstrated the slightest hint of interest in Warhammer, I would be inclined to "rescue" him with some decent miniatures and try to get him into real military miniatures gaming. Same costs, better models, more rewarding simulations.