$250K seems really low, especially for the number of people in the video. Any idea where their additional funding comes from? From what I read it does not indicate if they have self funded or have a different source - though they seem to be wary of using a publisher.

Their comparison with World of Tanks and the desire to use microtransactions to help fund the game has taken my slight interest in the game, doused it with gas, and thrown a lit match on it. Devs who put together Kickstarter pitches need to do a course on things that work, and things that will immediately alienate a large proportion of your audience.

Yeah, I cancelled my pledge that I made initially based on the great namedroppings, after I started reading some more about it. Counterstrike?? What a mish-mash of target groups they are trying to get here.

“Tanks in space” could be kinda fun. You’d control thrust and direction purely by shooting the main cannon. Also, you’re in a tank in outer space.

Wow, Jason Lutes is now rich:

Nice Job!

That ain’t workin’. That’s the way you do it. You sell the supplements with the crowd-fund-ing.

The upcoming stretch goals look great!

Thanks, mok. I’m not rich, though! All the contributors are getting paid for those stretch goals, and I think I’ll get some compensation as well, just not sure how much yet. Juggling the budget on this kind of thing is… interesting.

Dice storage:

Zen Bins

Think Marvel Dice Masters and all the rest:

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/zenbins/zen-bins-collectible-dice-game-storage-cdgs/description

Remember Quest for Glory, the old Sierra adventure series? The creators kickstarted a follow-up back in 2012. They are now doing another Kickstarter for 100k to help finish the game: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/transolargames/hero-u-adventure-role-playing-game. I chipped in some. Here’s the justification I got in a backer email:

Sad to read for those guys, but blargh. Remind me to never go work at a games publisher :-/

Yeah, I was coming in here to post about that update.

Is there such a thing as schaden-relief? I’m sad to no longer make games, but happy that I no longer have to worry about that sort of thing.

Jesus, I guess I’m glad I only get to play these things and don’t have to worry about how the sausage gets made. Or how many homes have to be mortgaged in the process.

I don’t think they have a publisher, it’s just an inside look at the harsh reality of giving a lump sum to some indie developers to deliver a complete product. The established studios like Obsidian and InXile did probably use other sources to fund development. There is no way 3.9 million was enough to cover the burn rate of Pillars of Eternity through 2.5 years of development.

My comment in particular was more about, “I wouldn’t want to be a games publisher who has to make calls about whether to continue funding in situations like this for small devs such as these people.”

Because even as a KS backer legally entitled to nothing but people’s “best efforts,” I still get pretty miffed seeing messages like that from creators I’ve backed. Maybe it’s entitlement, maybe it’s just a natural response. But it’s tempered by a great deal of sympathy for the misery they’re enduring. And I would never want to personally be in the position to say “Nevermind, we’re shutting it down; you’re life’s work is dead” OR “Sure, take more of my money to potentially sink into failure.” It sounds pretty awful, TBH.

The horror of putting a fixed estimate on a creative work.

The Hero-U Kickstarter was also hit by a 10k pledge through a hacked account:

We are doing very well despite someone who apparently hacked a Kickstarter account and made a false $10,000 pledge. That has been revoked by Kickstarter, but we are back up to almost $49,000. The rule of thumb is that any project that gets 30% of its goal within the first week is likely to be fully funded. We did that on the first day. Thank you so much for your support!

No Thank You, Evil, “A game of make-believe for creative kids and their families”. By Monte Cook of D&D 3.5 and Numenera fame. It’s basically a tabletop RPG tailored for kids.

I’m pretty excited for this. I’ve done some basic RPG playing with my kids and they really enjoyed it, but it’s hard to nail down the “sophistication level” for different ages.

I saw this on the Kicktraq and figured it was one of the various religious games that I see pop up on KS pretty regularly, just based on the name.

Same here! “No Thank You, Evil” sounds so lame.