The idea behind IndieBox is very simple: Sell indie games in a box. Why? Because getting a game in a box, with a colour manual and a poster, is a really nice touch, thatâs why.
Sure, itâs easy to get an indie game on Steam, or in a Humble Bundle, or however, but thatâs not the point of IndieBox. The point of IndieBox is that you donât just get a game, you get to partake in the physical experience of getting a fancy new PC game, a pleasure thatâs been dead for well over a decade now.
By fancy I donât mean a DVD case and a slip of paper. I mean a proper PC gaming box, like we used to get, in the good old days. IndieBox is acting as a physical publisher for a range of indie games, and their first title is Teslagrad, a Steampunk platformer that was first released last year.
My copy showed up yesterday, and it was so cool I thought Iâd take some shots and show you whatâs inside. Note that I only know itâs Teslagrad because I opened it. Future purchases are blind orders, concealed by the black packaging. More on that later.
As you can see, yes, itâs a box. Digging the Genesis styling.
Inside is not just the game, but a whole bunch of stuff, including badges, stickers, a poster, a papercraft model, soundtrack and a full colour manual.
If youâre wondering where the game is, itâs the credit card-looking thing in the middle. Thatâs actually a thin USB stick, which while looking precarious does indeed function and contain a copy of the game.
Itâs a very cool way to get hold of some very good video games. I mean, the games themselves are great, but to get all this other stuff with them as well helps dial back the clock a little and make you consider them to be something you own, rather than a digital plaything that you borrow, consume then forget.
That is, if itâs something you actually want to own. IndieBoxâs sales pitch is an unusual one; rather than offering these boxes for sale, theyâre asking you to subscribe to their service. Pay $15 a month, for example, and every month for 6 months youâll get a game delivered to your door.
You just wonât know what that game is. Theyâre promising some big guns, so itâs not like youâd be getting some random piece of busted junk turn up at your house, but then not every game is for everyone. So if youâre picky, this might not be for you.
Then again, the key market for this stuff probably wants all the indie game boxes, so wonât mind what the actual title is. And it might be a very smart for IndieBox to cover the manufacturing costs of all this stuff while still offering an affordable service.
Those after specific games that IndieBox are offering will be able to get them as âback issuesâ, with games available individually after theyâve been sent out, but those will be available in strictly limited quantities; Teslagrad, for example, has already sold out.
It might not be for everyone, then, but for a certain indie gaming aficionado â or someone nostalgic for the days PC games were a luxury purchase â this might be the most surprisingly effective way of spending money on video games youâve ever seen.
You can check out more at IndieBox