Honorable game designer?

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11 comments, last by Norman Barrows 10 years, 9 months ago
Loads of links

There are some pretty cool articles there. I wish I could bookmark your post to read them later.

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I wish I could bookmark your post to read them later.

I normally just use my browser's book-marking system, but if you're looking for something built into the site you can "follow" the topic: click the "follow this topic" button in the upper right, and optionally choose how often you would like to be notified of new activity in the topic -- if you just want a bookmark you don't have to get notifications though. Use the drop-down menu at the very top of the site (the one accessible by clicking your name when logged in) and choose the "content I follow" option to view topics you've followed. smile.png

- Jason Astle-Adams


No DRM.

i've been building and selling PC games since 1988.

unfortunately, i'm not in the business of selling games, i'm in the business of selling key cd's.

if you make something cool, people WILL steal it. sad but true.

a lot has to do with the price, scope, and target audience of the game, as to how likely it is to be pirated.

i've done games with no DRM, software registration keys, and key disks / cds. anything half way popular with less than key disk/cd protection gets pirated.

CAVEMAN v1.3 fell victim to this. it had software key registration. earlier versions had key CDs. it was cracked by a guy in Europe, and posted on a warez site out of Zaire, which was hosted on servers in Russia. Couldn't figure out why sales had dropped in later versions. Turned out, I'd been cracked. Losses were so bad, i eventually had to close down Rockland and go get a regular job. I spent 2 years building CAVEMAN v1.0, and released 3 updated versions over 2 years. then i got cracked.

all it takes is one copy on the web, and all your work is for nothing. big companies like MS can eat the losses associated with piracy. indies can't always afford to do that.

it all boils down to this question in the potential buyer's mind:

"how much more game do i get, and for how many dollars, than i already have now, downloaded for free?"

if the answer is "they get nothing more for the cost of a legit copy", they have no incentive to buy.

as for other things,

there's much less stigma attached to indie games than there used to be.

users will judge the product on its own merits. being a big company gives you the advantage (or disadvantage) of already having a reputation with the user. so they might attract the user's attention more easily.

but a good game that appeals to its core audience and is WELL MARKETED will tend to succeed on its own.

when in doubt, treat your players as you would want to be treated if someone else had made the game, and you were the one playing it. don't be mean, don't make them wait, don't make them do dull or stupid stuff, don't frustrate them, etc.

Norm Barrows

Rockland Software Productions

"Building PC games since 1989"

rocklandsoftware.net

PLAY CAVEMAN NOW!

http://rocklandsoftware.net/beta.php

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