Monday 29 April 2024

The OSR is Much, Much Bigger Than You Think

I recently came across a fascinating article, called 'No one buys books', which, while misleadingly titled (it should probably be 'people only buy certain types of books'), is well worth reading. The author basically read through all of the transcripts of a major antitrust trial involving the merger of Penguin Random House and Simon & Schuster. and gleaned from it some fascinating nuggets of information about the business model of publishers. I think I already knew that the publishing industry basically functions on the basis of publishing lots of loss-making books on the basis that one or two each year will be huge bestsellers and make megabucks. But I didn't realise quite the extent to which this is true. From the article:

The DOJ’s lawyer [the DOJ having brought the antitrust case] collected data on 58,000 titles published in a year and discovered that 90 percent of them sold fewer than 2,000 copies and 50 percent sold less than a dozen copies.

The money is basically made from four categories: classics (The Lord of the Rings, etc.), kids' books (The Hungry Caterpillar, etc.), celeb biographies (Michelle Obama, etc.) and franchise authors (Stephen King, etc.). Everything else is almost certainly loss-making, and the numbers are surprisingly small even for books by major public figures:

Representative Ilhan Omar, a Democrat from Minnesota, is no global pop star, but she has a significant social-media presence, with 3 million Twitter followers and another 1.3 million on Instagram. Yet her book, This Is What America Looks Like: My Journey from Refugee to Congresswoman, which was published in May 2020, has sold just 26,000 copies across print, audio and e-book formats, according to her publisher. 

Tamika D. Mallory, a social activist with over a million Instagram followers, was paid over $1 million for a two-book deal. But her first book, State of Emergency, has sold just 26,000 print copies since it was published in May, according to BookScan. 

The journalist and media personality Piers Morgan had a weaker showing in the United States [than the UK]. Despite his followers on Twitter (8 million) and Instagram (1.8 million), Wake Up: Why the World Has Gone Nuts has sold just 5,650 U.S. print copies since it was published a year ago, according to BookScan.

Of course, the big takeaway is, to repeat, that most books don't really sell. In the US market:

[I]n 2020, only 268 titles sold more than 100,000 copies, and 96 percent of books sold less than 1,000 copies.

Yes, you read that correctly. And, yes, it means the OSR is much, much bigger than you think: Yoon-Suin, in the year it was published, sold far more copies than 96% of books put out by actual publishing companies in 2020. It really did. And you will be able to think of books recently put out after successful kickstarters that have sold, or will sell, far, far more copies than that, too.

Of, course, we are not Brandon Sanderson, who recently earned $42 million from a kickstarter campaign to self-publish four novels. (Perhaps The Great North....?) But I find it fascinating that the humble elfgame fare that we collectively vomit forth into the collective subconscious is actually, barring the big exceptions that make the publishing companies their actual money, more lucrative than the vast swathe of contemporary literary fiction. On the one hand, this says something depressing about the state of mainstream publishing and its ability to produce things that inspire people to read them. But on the other, it says something quite extraordinarily positive about our level of cultural influence in comparison to New York publishing houses.

28 comments:

  1. Just to add more food for thought!

    According to Drivethru RPG, for the highest selling badge (Adamantine) you "only" need to sell 5000+ copies.

    Only 201 books so far have reached these sales.

    https://help.drivethrupartners.com/hc/en-us/articles/12780761951255-Bestseller-Metals-and-How-to-Earn-Badges

    https://www.drivethrurpg.com/metal.php

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    1. That's interesting. Although I suppose that's only one outlet.

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    2. These are all the OSR-ish Platinum bestsellers on DriveThruRPG

      Monster Manual (AD&D)
      Players Handbook (AD&D)
      Dungeon Master’s Guide (AD&D)
      Fiend Folio (AD&D)
      G1-3 Against the Giants (AD&D)
      N1 Against the Cult of the Reptile God (AD&D)
      T1 The Village of Hommlet (AD&D)
      T1-4 The Temple of Elemental Evil (AD&D)

      D&D Basic Set Rulebook (B/X)
      D&D Expert Set Rulebook (B/X)
      B1 In Search of the Unknown (B/X)
      B2 The Keep on the Borderlands (B/X)
      B4 The Lost City (B/X)
      B10 Night’s Dark Terror (B/X)
      GAZ1 The Grand Duchy of Karameikos (BECMI)

      Player’s Handbook: Revised (AD&D 2e)
      Dungeon Master’s Guide (AD&D 2e)
      Monstrous Manual (AD&D 2e)
      Night Below (AD&D 2e)
      Dark Sun Boxed Set (AD&D 2e)
      Planescape Campaign Setting (AD&D 2e)
      In the Cage: A Guide to Sigil (AD&D 2e)

      Call of Cthulhu Starter Set
      Call of Cthulhu 7th Edition: Keeper’s Rulebook
      Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay: Core Rulebook (4e)
      Zweihander RPG: Revised Core Rulebook
      Cyberpunk 2020
      Night City (Cyberpunk 2020)

      OSE Advanced Fantasy Player’s Tome
      Adventurer Conqueror King System
      Dungeon Crawl Classics RPG
      Stars Without Number: Revised Edition
      Worlds Without Number

      Vornheim: The Complete City Kit
      The Gardens of Ynn
      The Stygian Library
      The Black Wyrm of Brandonsford (B/X)

      Mörk Borg
      Five Torches Deep
      The Black Hack 2e
      Knave
      Maze Rats

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    3. Nice - although a lot of these will have sold more through other sources. Until it went out of print Yoon-Suin sold more copies through lulu than DriveThruRPG, for example.

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    4. Hey!

      Into the Unknown is OSR-ish and platinum too. >:-[

      https://www.drivethrurpg.com/en/publisher/13311/O5R-Games

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  2. Well but now I wanna know how many copies Yoon Suin sold, but somehow that seems a gauche question to ask. Let's see... if I were to stack all the sold copies of Yoon Suin, how majestic of a pagoda could I construct for my pet gharial?

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    1. It sold somewhere more than 1,000 copies and somewhere less than 100,000. :)

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  3. I've noticed that of the two local bookstores, within the sf/f section, one (Chain) basically only stocks "known quantities" (ie names you recognize) and the other (independent) is better but emphasizes certain authors and categories. There's a B&N I sometimes stop at (it's 3.5 hours away but I go out there every few months) where (my guess is) they've given SOMEONE free rein to order and that person Knows Their Stuff. It is glorious. Classic? Check. Feminist? Check. Grimdark? check. Urban fantasy? check. Literary SF/F classic? Check. LGTBQ+ friendly? Check. Hard SF? Check.

    Correspondingly, all the local game stores pretty much only stock WotC, Paizo (some), and one or two others that some employee was nuts about and runs a game with. Almost none of them stock any OSR material. If I didn't keep up online I wouldn't know it existed.

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    1. I believe I'm right in saying that Barnes & Noble recently made a change - previously publishers would pay them to put books on display, but they're now having staff in the bookshops do it.

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  4. My title that has sold the most copies is Carcosa. I do not know exactly how many have sold, but it is more than 5,000.

    Not only do extraordinarily few copies of books in general sell, far fewer are actually read. Many people do not know that even big-name authors typically have little to no say on what goes on the covers of their books, even what the book's title will be! The publishers' attitude is basically, "It's none of the author's business what is on the cover. His job is to write the words on the pages, which nobody will read anyway. When people buy a book, they buy its cover, so we're going to make a cover that we think will sell. The book's contents are utterly irrelevant."

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    1. If the point of the cover is to sell a book, then why are they so crap?! Book covers were so much better in the 70s and 80s.

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    2. Agreed. Actually the UK based satirical magazine Private Eye had a long-running feature towards the back in which they lampooned modern book covers and how they all look the same and basically copy off each other.

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  5. That's pretty cool. My own game sold about 500+ copies in the first year, so didn't Crack those 4%, but very interesting for context.

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    1. Still more than comfortably in the top half!

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  6. Thanks for pointing out this article! It was really fascinating to read and it really does put the OSR and roleplaying content into a new light.

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  7. Is this counting people self-publishing on Amazon? That adds a lot to the numbers. I know one guy who publishes fantasy comedy e-books and after trucking away at it for years he's making a tidy little income off of that (so that he only needs to have a part-time day job these days IIRC). The main way you do that is build up a biiiiiiiig back catalog of short books and sell them cheap so that if your only books are only bringing in a few bucks a month you can still do OK since you've put out a shit-ton of books over the years and it adds up nicely.

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    1. Yeah, I know somebody who I believe does something similar in the field of lesbian romance.

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  8. I remember reading the figures from that trial at the time, and taking great heart from it. I have since heard that the "50 percent sold less than a dozen copies" line is wrong, or spin, though I don't have details.

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    1. Still, I think the 96% selling less than 1,000 is real.

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  9. Interesting! But I wonder how that accounts for e-books and audio books, both of which are significant portions of "reading" these days?

    Most of my reading is through the library, and they have some VERY esoteric materials...

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    1. Good question; don't know the answer!

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  10. When I see a new dust-up in the OSR I always keep in mind that there is far more money at stake than most people realize and that makes people do crazy things. It's a shame. My own vanity press keeps me in PDFs and Transformers pretty darn well and I'm an unknown.

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    1. I mean, money at stake yes. Amount of money that would sustain a person as a full time occupation? Not for many. Then consider the people who generally get involved in the dustups and its even worse.

      They do crazy things precisely because they are not in an area with higher stakes. Compare the revenue and projected income of tabletop rpgs with something like video games and put it in perspective.

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    2. I agree with Prince. It's the low stakes involved that result in all the squabbling.

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  11. Hah, this means my self-published retroclone in Finnish (so, a niche of a niche of a niche) has already sold more copies than 50% of published books in the US. Mind-boggling!

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