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by corethree
923 days ago
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There's valid reasoning why a company wouldn't let another company make a movie or TV series. It cheapens the IP if the movie/series goes bad. It's hard to describe the effect. Essentially this is what happened with LOTR. Also take for instance the recent D&D movie which was just ok/slightly good. The movie cheapens the D&D IP, while something like Baldurs Gate builds on it. Maybe from a business perspective it's the most profitable move but for the original subject the IP was centered around, whether it was books, games loses the charm if the movie sucks and Hollywood churns out shit movies for a quick buck really fast. It's not always bad though. While Marvel did well, DC did not. It's weirdly irrational but that's just how people behave. |
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I think the other D&D game that came out recently (Dark Alliance) is probably a better example of devaluing the brand.