That sound youâve been hearing all week? Oh, itâs nothing:
just the collective exhale of millions of people who are all grateful that Broken Age doesnât suck.
After the tidal wave of cash
and enthusiasm
about Kickstarterâs possible impact on video games in 2012, 2013 was the year
that malaise set in, with scams, dubious stories and general fatigue becoming
part of the conversation. But the release of Broken
Ageâs first act, The
Banner Saga and RĂ©publiqueâall well-received games made
possible by crowdfundingâcould be a reason to have some renewed optimism about
what Kickstarter can mean for video games.
Weâre only beginning to see the first few harvests of the
crowdfunding crop cycle but already there are cautionary tales. Ouyaâs struggle for relevance. Developers leaving. Games that hit funding
goals with no further communication
from project leads. Campaigns where breathless support curdles into rancorous
bad-mouthing.
https://lastchance.cc/ouya-the-kotaku-review-659671543%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Every day, it seems like dozens of game-centric Kickstarters
are rattling their cups in your faces, jostling for your attention and
donations in ways that range from desperate to annoying. Add it all up and itâs
easy to be cynical.
Thatâs why itâs important that, right now, Broken Age stands as the anti-Ouya: a
big-deal Kickstarter product that isnât derisively snickered at and that sort
of justifies the annoyances of crowd-funding. The wait for the final version of
a Kickstarted product is agonizing because, again, thatâs your money that youâre waiting on to come back to you. But when it ends with sharply realized games like,
say, Shadowrun
Returns, it feels like the donation, the wait, the doubt were all worth
it.
Looking ahead, 2014 might also see the releases of Project Eternity and Wasteland 2. Other buzzed-about crowdfunded
games like Mighty No. 9 and Star Citizen are probably at least a year out, but when they do
finally launch, backers and buyers will likely find some kind of comfort
knowing that itâs a project where the creators did what they wanted. If youâd heard about a
new video game Kickstarter last week, your impulse mightâve been to ignore it.
This week, though, reminds you of whatâs possible when the money, the passion
and creativity of a crowdsourced video game clicks.
https://lastchance.cc/capcom-abandoned-mega-man-you-saved-him-1438292184%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E