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Palladium Books Going Out of Business

kainewynd2 writes to mention a public plea put out in the Palladium books forums by the company owner Kevin Siembada. He bemoans the Rifts publisher's poor financial outlook, and asks people to buy a $50 print to save the company. From the post: "The truly wonderful Rifts® videogame - Rifts® Promise of Power - was stillborn. The N-Gage platform never took off in North America. That meant the N-Gage and Rifts® Promise of Power would NOT be available on the mass market in the USA and Canada. Finding it anywhere in North America required an act of God. There would be no Nokia royalty-based revenue stream. Nor would there be a Nokia videogame sequel and the money that might come from it. Nokia treated me nothing short of GREAT. They lost truckloads of money on this venture. We're both the victims of marketing fallout. Please don't blame these wonderful people for Palladium's woes - circumstance just didn't make them part of our solution." Wow, they made a game for the N-Gage and then lost a bunch of money. Who ever could have forseen that?

7 of 126 comments (clear)

  1. Finally? by revlayle · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Palladium made interesting and rich game worlds. Unfortunately, their game system is much to be desired, IMNSHO. Book formatting, editing and quality were always under par (I had trouble looking up most things in any of their books). Great ideas and poor execution. I'm personally suprised they lasted this long.

  2. Palladium by Tebriel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Great settings, horrible game mechanics.

    I am a huge fan of the Rifts setting and I love the Robotech material, but the character and combat systems are unwieldy. If they had better game mechanics, I'd start buying and playing their stuff again.

    --
    The Blaster Master Fighting for Truth, Justice, and Evil Pie since 1979
    1. Re:Palladium by HunterZ · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Same here. First pen-and-paper RPG I played was Heroes Unlimited. I found their rule system impossible to grasp as a first RPG, however, and even more frustrating was that they simply copied-and-pasted the core rules into every book they published, instead of revising them to be more coherent with each new book. Even better would have been to publish an independent core rule manual that would be required as a base for use with the individual setting books (Robotech, Rifts, TMNT, etc.), which they then could have revised over time.

      Alternatively, they could/should have jumped on the d20 system when it became popular.

      --
      Arguing about vi versus Emacs is like arguing whether it's better to make fire by rubbing sticks or banging rocks.
  3. I didn't know who they were by GearType2 · · Score: 3, Informative

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palladium_Books

    Honestly, I thought myself an avid RPer, being a fan of cyberpunk and D&D for the past few years. I've been to many a game store, but somehow never noticed *any* of their books:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palladium_Books
    ^Information on who they are, and what they sell^

  4. Please update the post with important information by fruitbane · · Score: 5, Informative

    Two things we needed to see in the post that make this Slashdot post misleading, all important items in the full article, are that:

    1.) Palladium is close to going out of business, but not out just yet.

    2.) Their primary reason for being on the brink appears to be embezzlement, or some related crime. Their real business isn't enough to overcome the loss incurred due to that legal trouble.

    I'm not a big RIFTS fan, but I'm all for responsible reporting.

  5. Re:MISLEADING HEADLINE! by gowen · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Kevin is asking for help to keep them afloat
    Dude. If your company needs help to be kept afloat, then it is going out of business.

    However you want to spin it: Not afloat = out of business.
    --
    Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
  6. Re:MISLEADING HEADLINE! by Zonk · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A plea for their fans to bail them out of several thousand dollars worth of debt sounds like a 'going out of business' sign to me. I understand your objection, but the content of the post is pretty clear.

    I have very, very little sympathy for Palladium. They're a business. They may be selling fantasy, but they work in the real world. In the real world, if you want to call yourself a business, you don't go screaming to the people who have been propping you up all these years because you have some financial troubles.

    That's what Chapter 11 is for.