|
Member
(05-04-2012, 12:38 PM)
|
#153
I am giving you an internet high-five right now. 1.) Because you are absolutely right and I feel the same about the state of video games 2.) Because Nobilis is badass; so your avatar is automatically awesome, which means you are too.
|
|
My Contribution
(05-04-2012, 12:40 PM)
|
#154
|
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 12:43 PM)
|
#155
The blog post for this one isn't up yet, yeah? I don't think they're shitting on kickstarter in general, I just bet they've found some particularly shady projects and are poking fun that. I've never donated to a kickstarter project and only been on the website a couple times, but I could tell you that there's going to be videogame-related hoaxes on there right now without even looking at, because people go where the money is, and all of the sudden there's a bunch of money for videogames in KS.
|
|
Junior Member
(05-04-2012, 01:01 PM)
|
#157
Its far too early to even try and judge the effect that KS is having on the industry, whilst it does sound like every backer is taking a much larger risk than they would be if they simply bought a retail game the benefits of this have the potential to be huge, some of these games would have never been funded if not for KS after all, however there is always the chance that these games could either suck or simply never see completion, in which case every backer has lost out.
Due the relative new-ness of KS we have to see how the first major projects funded on KS deliver, because if they let the backers down then KS will see a major hit in how willing people are to back new projects. KS has honestly made things interesting lately to say the least. |
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 01:04 PM)
|
#158
This comic needs a follow up.
"Thank you pledgers! As we surpassed our initial goal we now have a new goal post of 100.000.000 dollars. If we reach this goal we will add more RPGs, more depth, additional quests and weapons, and more RPGs. We are also in the editing stage of the behind the scenes documentary first chapter starring myself and the whole team (my brother in-law and my friend Eddie) snorting blow and heavy partying with some prostitutes. Keep this thing rolling!" |
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 01:13 PM)
|
#160
|
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 01:24 PM)
|
#161
What I find more worrisome is the fact that almost any game that succeeds on Kickstarter is either
A) A sequel. B) Being made by someone famous. (Within the right circles.) Nearly every proposal occupies a genre/series that already exists, effectively allowing people to buy more of the same. Now, this isn't a bad thing--the best games are often remakes and sequels. It's just that the Kickstarter model isn't equipped to encourage the growth of the medium, as nobody is truly willing to bet money on something they can't connect to on some level. Your game has to HAVE an audience, however small, or it won't get made, and this limits the breadth of what can be funded. |
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 01:34 PM)
|
#162
Of course, the existing publisher model has exactly the same issue; indeed, moreso, because *they* need to be confident that they can turn a profit, whereas a kickstarter project just has to stay within budget. Certainly, delving into new areas can only really be accomplished by people not immediately motivated by profit, or companies brave enough to take a significant risk (See: Wii Sports. Sure, in hindsight, it's massive, but that was a monumental risk at the time. Offset by the Wii's reduced power, but still a risk.). That said, I think that it could be argued that resurrecting 'dead' genres is, arguably, a form of growing the medium - and those who remember and liked those genres when they were successful *will* be able to connect to the project. |
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 01:35 PM)
|
#163
And just because it's made by someone famous doesn't mean that it can't grow the medium. Take a look at The Banner Saga. It seems to be a very unique idea and definitely not a sequel to anything thematically or mechanically even though it gets its credibility from the involvement of 'famous' ex Bioware employees.
Last edited by Azih; 05-04-2012 at 01:39 PM.
|
|
(05-04-2012, 01:39 PM)
|
#164
The PA guys are hugely supportive of Kickstarter. Like most other people on GAF who see huge potential in Kickstarter to provide a solid alternative to the existing poisonous publishing model, really.
Doesn't mean that scammers (which do exist on KS, denying that means you're blind) aren't a good opportunity to poke fun at in a comic. We were all laughing at the "Your World" pitch, and rightfully so. |
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 01:40 PM)
|
#166
And well, existing genres? Come on, that's not at all similar to being part of an existing series, anything one makes will match an established genre, from interactive fiction to strategy to puzzle to music to adventure to a vague action, rpg, horror, survival or whatever other description. If it's interactive, you can assign it to an existing video game genre, it's as simple as that. That doesn't mean it's more of the same. If it was, people wouldn't care to pledge and just get what's already out there. The fact FTL can fit as some kind of roguelike or strategy genre doesn't mean there's anything like it that I can go and buy right now from some big or small publisher. Or that if something vaguely similar exists I can't actually hate it yet like this take on it.
Quote:
Quote:
Last edited by Alextended; 05-04-2012 at 03:47 PM.
|
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 01:41 PM)
|
#167
The great thing about Kickstarter from my point of view is that it breaks the hold of publishers and their marketing departments as the sole arbiters of what games people are willing to buy and provides an avenue for actual gamers to have a direct say.
The publishers were of the opinion that people don't want a new Tim Schafer adventure game, a Wasteland 2, a Banner Saga, a new Shadowrun. People disagreed and now those games are being made. I hope all of them are roaring successes as well. And for the really experimental stuff we've got small Flash games and mods to try out new concepts. I meant that's where tower defense, catapault, and MOBA games came from. |
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 01:42 PM)
|
#168
The creator has an obligation to either provide the reward or a refund (per the terms), so it is a pretty big deal 'if it doesn't [get made]'. This is why kickstarter has the all-or-nothing funding model which is designed to make sure you get everything you need and don't run into a 'partial funding' situation. Eventually someone will sue a creator that does not deliver. Backing a kickstarter project is a (pre) purchase, unless you specifically ask for 'No Reward'
Quote:
Last edited by sangreal; 05-04-2012 at 02:06 PM.
|
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 01:44 PM)
|
#169
They're usually pretty topical, so I think this is a joke playing on that one Kickstarter that was kind of shady where the dude just ducked out of the project.
I don't think this is meant as a general mockery of ALL of Kickstarter, and I think it's weird to assume that. |
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 01:46 PM)
|
#171
I don't think they're shitting on Kickstarter as whole here. There was a news post on the PA site a few days ago about how some users uncovered a Kickstarter setup to just take money from people and not develop a game.
I'm guessing (haven't looked at the site today) that is what brought about this comic. A couple weeks ago Tycho posted links to some Kickstarter(s) he wanted to support, or wanted people to support. Granted it was for tabletop games I believe. |
|
(05-04-2012, 01:47 PM)
|
#173
If you've only heard of Kickstarter since the DFA news and been following the trend on related gaming sites but not Kickstarter itself, it's to be expected that you'd get such a warped perspective. These big projects that are reported on on different sites do hog the majority of media attention, but there's basically a constant stream of small gaming Kickstarters which get funded (and have been for years now), vastly outnumbering the handful of big budget propositions from Schafer, Fargo, Al Lowe and Jane Jensen. |
|
I got d 2 tha eepdicked
d-e-e-p-d-i-c-k-e-d (05-04-2012, 01:53 PM)
|
#175
|
|
Lit himself on fire to get
a mod to tag him (05-04-2012, 01:55 PM)
|
#176
People need to stop posting PA comics as if they're structured debates. Their news posts, maybe. Their comics are literally just the two of them in a room throwing ideas at each other until they think something is funny.
God I wish they still made podcasts of their writing process. That was the most fascinating shit. |
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 01:56 PM)
|
#177
Why do people always ignore Indiegogo when it comes to these pub funds? It's being around since 2008 just like KS, it offers international support which Kickstarter doesn't and it has Paypal as an option.
I already know the answer but its a shame it gets ignored just because the craze started on Kickstarter. |
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 01:57 PM)
|
#178
As for the Kickstarter stuff, I like the idea of it all, hell I even admitted that I would kickstart JRPG localization, but to say that this whole thing does not come with some really shady possibilities is alittle disingenuous, guys like Double fine I have little doubt will screw people, but i've seen quite a few Kickstarters that I really don't see it ending well for anyone, are we really pretending that there are people out there that wont take advantage of this whole thing to get some easy money? If someone is asking for kickstarter for a game, but has no reputation to begin with, I really don't they worried about losing it, or the "respect" of gamers. |
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 01:59 PM)
|
#179
Fixed. Subtle, but very important difference. Still I see Kickstarter as useful since it allows games that otherwise would never have been greenlit, to actually get made. However they could certainly do more to protect users from scammers.
|
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 02:35 PM)
|
#181
Being unwilling to take a risk is fine, but in any development process *someone* needs to take on a risk. If sufficient people aren't willing to then the only people willing to take on said risk will be the big publishers, with all the negatives (and, to be fair, positives) that that brings.
|
|
Junior Member
(05-04-2012, 03:16 PM)
|
#182
As far as PA comics are concerned I usually read them as I would Sci-Fi. That is I do not take what is written in the comic as a commentary on the present state of a situation but rather a plausible scenario pending our actions towards.
I pledged money to the Double Fine KS, I know they have employees, a reputation, and a functioning studio. Also, I like their other games so I doubt I will be disappointed with the final result. On the other hand, there are some KS's out there that I'm not so keen on. What happens when the final product falls short of expectations? I suspect these early, ideal, halcyon days of KS will suddenly hit raw reality for a lot of people; shit happens. Then there are the scammers/cons who get their jollies by screwing you out of your money. Pledgers beware I suppose is the message to be learned here. |
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 03:33 PM)
|
#183
Well for the Double Fine one, I've already gotten access to the first episode of the documentary and some neat bonus videos which they promised. So far so good!
|
|
Banned
(05-04-2012, 03:46 PM)
|
#185
TROLLOLOLOL? |
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 03:47 PM)
|
#187
1) Had no mining experience 2) Had no mining equipment 3) Couldn't demonstrate that gold was found anywhere in Montana 4) Couldn't demonstrate the gold, gold dust, or other geological survey that made him think that he'd even found a vein of gold It's a business venture. They're asking people to speculate on entertainment by paying their salaries and fronting them on all their capital. Of course people are going to pay into the things that seem to have a more favorable risk/reward ratio. You could ask for more oversight and general compliance, but that's just going to make costs soar. Who is going to run the Audit Kickstart? |
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 03:47 PM)
|
#189
|
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 03:49 PM)
|
#190
Same thing that happens when people pre-order or buy a game that wasn't Kickstarted yet still falls short. That is, nothing much, one just keeps trying to make informed decisions before giving money, I'm sure that works for most seasoned gamers more often than it doesn't. When it doesn't, nobody decides to stop buying games altogether so I don't think the majority will stop being willing to Kickstart projects altogether either, rather than simply continue to expect to be convinced by the developers, via past works, signs of investment on their part, ideas that appear to be desirable yet practical, etc.
Some projects will deliver, some won't, everyone is already aware of this, it's not some well kept secret people are oblivious to.
Last edited by Alextended; 05-04-2012 at 04:51 PM.
|
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 04:11 PM)
|
#191
But there are lot of smaller games developed by nobodys. Of course there's little chance for nobody to get 1M+ of founding through KS right now. But it will change when people will start to take advantage (in good way) of KS. Right now there are four groups - small modest projects by nobodys, stupid ambitious projects by nobodys who know jack shit about managing projects that big, and medium projects by "famous" people, and scams. I'm sure there will be decline in groups 2 and 4 (at least percentage wise) over time. |
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 04:23 PM)
|
#192
Ok, this first page is ridiculous. Context people.
For the last week or two, Penny Arcade has been linking and pimping out a number of different Kickstarter campaigns. They're Kickstarter supporters, people. Just read through their last couple of posts. Then this week, an actual Kickstarter scam comes out. So they make fun of it. Just that scam, and the type of people who unfortunately fall for them. It's... painful to read GAF at times. |
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 08:58 PM)
|
#196
Guess what people, if they made a strip about a guy selling some "uses quantum properties and ki exotic fruit" juice, and Gabe bought it at $30 a bottle it doesn't mean they are against juice. Scammers and "Gabe is a dumbass" are the key words here. |
|
Member
(05-04-2012, 09:08 PM)
|
#197
Kickstarter is one of the best things to happen to gaming in the recent years, that's a fact, not an opinion. Yeah, maybe not every game will turn out TEH BEST EVER, but at least we get a CHANCE of getting the kind of games WE want, not the kind of games EAs focus testers want (i.e. shit like Mass Effect & Dragon Age 2). The fact that Wasteland 2 only exists through Kickstarter is proof enough that you understand shit about this stuff. "It's" obviously NOT working well and hasn't been working well for a long time.
Last edited by Famassu; 05-04-2012 at 09:11 PM.
|
|
gittin' up in yo holonet modal verbs: dem Nanofuchs be AUXILIARY.
(05-04-2012, 09:14 PM)
|
#199
|
|
Banned
(05-04-2012, 09:16 PM)
|
#200
I think a ridiculous number of people on this site construe things in the most negative way possible and are completely lost when it comes to subtlety/things not explicitly disclaimed in bold lettering. |