Postmortem

Design

We decided to make The Wyrd of Stromgard after Sam had made a Viking campaign for Dungeon World, spent ~50 hours on lore, made a map, and built a detailed setting she called Stromgard. We played it 3 times then moved on to another game/setting as our game group often does. Later after quitting my job to start Lost Dutchman Software she realized that she really enjoys making RPG content and there's no reason we can't make that in addition to video games- besides, the first video game we were making was wildly off schedule and it would help to get more projects out. We decided that since so much work was already put into Stromgard, we would continue with it instead of making an entirely new project from scratch.

The idea was that this would keep the production time short, just a few months to get the basic product in place, then we could launch a Kickstarter and playtest/edit the game into something we could be proud of. We thought the whole thing should have only taken 3-4 months of part time work.

It took ~6 months before we were even ready to launch a Kickstarter. The whole month leading up to the Kickstarter and the whole four weeks during it, we were full-time devoted to this single project, which put our other projects further behind. Both of our initial projects ended up going way over schedule; we need to work on scope.



You can read more on her design process here.



Production Plan

Knowing the profit margin was going to be thin and assuming that the majority of the sales would come from the Kickstarter, we shopped around quite a bit. We got quotes from almost 70 printers based on them printing 100 6x9", black and white interior, 250 page books. None of our local printers could compete with online shops. We ended up with 2 book printing plans and a few backups that were priced similarly.



Lulu.com was our plan if we sold less than 500 copies of the book. They were the cheapest at 4.86 per book, and they had the advantage of having printing locations in multiple country's. If we sold over 500 we were going to use Guangzhou Warm Printing & Packaging Co., Ltd in China. They were not the cheapest but they appeared to make a higher quality product then their competitors and publicized the benefits there employees receive. They would have been $2 per book with a minimum order of 1000 books.







The maps were even more tiered as every poster printer had different minimum orders, you can see our chart below the kind of spread we were dealing with.



18" X 24" Maps Printer Cost Shipping Pre Fold? Total Cost Cost Per Map For 100 https://www.printsafari.com/us_en/posters 134.46 11.55 $53 199.01 1.99 Min order 250 https://www.printplace.com/products/posters 434 25.49 No 459.49 1.84 Min order 300 https://www.discmakers.com/quoter/default.aspx 198 49.14 No 247.14 0.82 Min order 500 (Local) Acme Prints 499 - No 499 1





The GM screens were a lot harder to price. Going online was not helpful... the only places that produced similar materials made them far too small, or the minimum order was way too high. We drove around to ~8 print shops in Mesa and Phoenix, AZ getting quotes from ~$8k for 1000 to ~$500 for 100 until we got to PriGraphics. They took one look at my old Dragon Strike DM screen that we brought as a reference, named off a type of paper, got a sheet from the back, handed it to us, and told us it would be cheaper to make the screen a little bigger since it would involve cutting one less time. The new size was a perk and the price was $250 for 100 and we had found our printer.







We guessed that we would sell ~50 GM Screens and Maps and ~100 physical books. So the expected costs were as follows:

Books - Lulu.com - $4.86 each

Maps - PrintSafari.com - $1.99 each

DM Screens - PriGraphics - $2.50 each

Which set the prices at about $4.86 for each stand alone book and $9.35 for each bundle we would sell.



Shipping and Fulfillment Plan

First of all if you plan to do a Kickstarter go here - https://stonemaiergames.com/kickstarter/lessons/shipping-and-fulfillment/

Jamey Stegmaier was the main resource I used to figure out how I was going to handle shipping. The TL;DR is that if I tried to ship from my house in the USA to a customer internationally it would cost a lot. Also, this could provide a very negative customer experience as international backers may have to go pay a VAT tax on pickup (in the EU or Australia). Furthermore, I could pay a much smaller VAT tax than they would if I just did a little planning ahead of time (the tax paid by the buyer is based on the price of the product but for the seller, the tax paid is based on the cost of production. So for the book, a buyer would have to pay a 20% tax on $30 but if I paid the VAT it’s 20% tax on $4.86). The best solution to deal with this is to use fulfillment centers.

Shipping in the USA

Thanks to Media Mail, this was the only region we could ship from home for less than what it costs to ship through a fulfillment center. Here are our domestic shipping cost estimates:

For the GM bundle the idea was to ship the book and GM screen separately. Making the cost $10.70 to ship (or $3.45 for the book).

Description Supplier Cost per order Min Order Size Cost to ship to us Cost per unit Book Envelope Amazon $28.45 100 - $0.28 GM bundle envelope Padded Flat Rate Envelope USPS - - - - 4 book box Amazon $23.66 25 - $0.95 Shipping Book USPS Media Mailer $3.17 1 - $3.17 Shipping GM Bundle Padded Flat Rate Envelope $7.25 1 - $7.25 Shipping 4 Books USPS Media Mailer $5.21 1 - $4.70









Shipping to Canada

USPS would cost $25-40 per shipment so we looked into fulfillment centers.

Company Per Order Cost Ave. Shipping Ship there (100) Total for (100)|per shipment Starlit Citadel 37.48 10.76 232.99 1346 | $13.50 Snakes and Lattes 0.00 9.50 232.99 1183 | $12





Shipping to Europe

Here, we had to use a fulfillment center regardless of the cost to ship from the US so that our customers would not have to pay outrageous VAT taxes and customs fees.

Company Per Order Cost Ave. Shipping VAT consignee? Ship there (100) Total for (100)|per shipment Spiral Galaxy $70 $8.51 Yes 52.43 1023 | $10.50 Spainbox $25 $14.94 Yes 85.08 1654 | $17





Shipping to Australia and the rest of the world

Here, we found a company called VFI that ships to Australia for the same price as the best in Australia option but they also ship to the rest of the world from China at a much better price than we could. We decided we would use them, the price per shipment depended on where we were shipping, we assumed that most of the orders that ere not in the USA, Canada, or Europe would be from Australia, so the estimated cost per shipment was ~$13.



We decided to offer free shipping to domestic buyers (baking in a shipping price with the cost of the book/GM bundle) and to offer international shipping at $5 extra. This shipping plan seemed like a good way to get more international sales, even if we profited less from each one.

Calculating a price

The expected cost of production plus the cost of shipping was:

USA Book = $8.31

USA GM Bundle = $20.05

International Book = ~$16.45

International GM Bundle = ~$22.35

We researched as many other similar projects as we could and decided based on their prices and sales that we would price the PDF at $15, the book at $30, and the GM bundle at $50. We wanted each step up to be small enough to try to entice backers to raise their pledge. Also we decided to do early-bird pricing to help get the Kickstarter off the ground.

Expected profits:

PDF: $15 - $0 = $15

USA Book: $30 - $8.31 = $21.69

USA GM Bundle:$50 - $20.05 = $29.95

International Book:$30 - ~$16.45 = ~$13.55

International GM Bundle:$50 -~$22.35 = ~$27.65

Estimating a funding goal

We looked back over all of the similar projects, and their sales for PDF's vs books vs extra's to guess what our distribution of sales would look like. We came to the conclusion that ~50% of our sales would be PDF's, ~44% physical books, and ~6% the GM Bundle. We also assumed that we would be able to get around 350 backers. Kickstarter keeps 5% and the processing fees are around 3% per sale. We also calculated the cost of production/shipping assuming that we would sell 2 copy's in the USA for every one sold internationally.



KS Estimate

Backers Gross Income

Cost(Production +

Shipping)

Fees(Kickstarter +

Payment Possessors)

Net Income Number of backers total

350 $6554 $1995 $524 $4035 PDF

175 $1750 $0 $140 $1610 Book

154 $3850 $1698 $308 $1844 GM Bundle

21 $945 $297 $76 $572





We knew we needed to raise another ~2K for art, and make enough to get back the ~1k we had already spent on art. We also had a $215 advertising budget. We played with the numbers above, experimenting with how few backers we would need to make enough to break even and decided that $4000 was the lowest we could go.



Then we ran the Kickstarter and it was a success!

Actual Production Costs and Process

Since we are new to using printers and Lulu has a hard to use interface, we ended up needing to order 4 proofs before we were ready to have them produce all the books. We also ended up with about 100 more pages in the book then our original estimate. The actual cost was $965.69 (this included ~18 extra books in case any were damaged in shipping).





The poster printer we wanted to use for the maps raised their prices so we had to look for a new one and ended up with a company out of Germany for a total of $110.70.

The quote from PriGraphics was spot on but I forgot it did not include taxes, after taxes the cost of 100 GM screens was $270.75.

We ended up printing 150 books, and 100 GM screens+Maps.







Expected costs vs Actual costs



Expected Cost Actual Cost Books $4.86 $6.44 Maps $1.99 $1.11 DM Screens $2.50 $2.71





Actual Shipping/Fulfillment Costs

We did not get enough sales in Canada to use a Canadian fulfillment center, so we crunched the numbers and it was cheaper to use VFI (Based in China) for Canada as well as Australia and the rest of the world than for us to ship from the USA to Canada.

Shipping the GM screens and Maps to the UK and China fulfillment centers was $130.65. Shipping to the backers out of the UK was $312.10, and from China was $213.65. All the shipping supplies + shipping costs for the USA were $397.87.

Expected costs vs Actual costs: (Expected numbers converted to use the actual amount we sold)



Region [units shipped] fulfillment center

Expected Actual Per shipment USA [80] Out of our house 493.5 397.87 $4.97 EU [38] Spiral Galaxy $399 312.10 $8.21 Everyone Else [14] VFI $182 213.65 $15.26

Business Viability

The biggest problem with making a Dungeon World supplement is that our customer base is limited to people who have and play Dungeon World. This helped us carve out a niche as there are already a lot of viking tabletop RPGs but it limited our potential customers too much to make a project of this scope worth doing.







As of the close of the Kickstarter we raised $6,291. Kickstarter fees and transaction fees left us with $5,692. Art cost about $3,000, advertising was $215, production was $1,347.14, and shipping was $1,054.27. This left us with a profit of ~$75. We have since made a few more sales on itch.io and DriveThruRPG, putting us currently at a profit of $275. This project took a little less than 400 hours of work, making our current pay $0.68 per hour.



Even if the project raised the amount of money we estimated before running the Kickstarter we would only have made $785, or $1.96 per hour. In the future, we need to more carefully examine the scope of a project vs the amount of money we could reasonably make off of it. We hope that it continues selling, as we are getting ready to sell it via print on demand... at this point all sales are just profit so the amount we made per hour could go up but for now we will not be making supplements for games unless we believe we can complete them in less than 20hrs.