You get 100% of a successful game and hopefully helped the small studio to be in a position where they can make more good games thanks to the success of the first one.
Your profit is not weighted in money but a more diverse landscape when it comes to games.
And if you like games and see what AAA does to the scene, you should see that als something to strife for. Or am I mistaken?
It’s more like an investment in infrastructure. The city isn’t making a dime from repaving roads, but they certainly are useful. It’s a bit of a gamble if they’ll develop potholes or even get finnished sometimes, but people want roads.
And people stay productive by enjoying hobbies and playing games. It’s an investment in infrastructure, just like fire, healthcare, police, power, water, transportation, etc.
Also, most roads in North America are cash negative, with many cities building new suburbs with high tax to pay for the roads in the previous suburb which are falling apart, which were built to pay for the next last suburb, on and on until the first car-centric suburbs were built in the 50s and 60s. Low density housing rarely pays for it’s public utilities directly, needing to essentially be subsidised by city centers to be worth it, and then you replace business with parking lots and everything gets so much worse…
There are thousands of great game that wouldn’t have got off the ground without early access, so not participating could absolutely change the quality of the final product. In many ways, early access in one step removed from crowdsourcing, which is an investment in an idea.
Investments aren’t necessarily about leveraging capital to generate more capital. It would be a very sad life to live where everything must be categorized by ROI.
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That’s the neat part, you don’t!
You son of a bitch! I’m in!
Sometimes they’re cheaper than launch price? Or you may get exclusive cosmetics? Idk
(Not saying it’s worth it)
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If only they were cheaper to reflect the value that you’ve contributed to the product
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They very often are, with exceptions rare enough to cause a stir.
You get 100% of a successful game and hopefully helped the small studio to be in a position where they can make more good games thanks to the success of the first one.
Your profit is not weighted in money but a more diverse landscape when it comes to games.
And if you like games and see what AAA does to the scene, you should see that als something to strife for. Or am I mistaken?
You’re investing in the quality of the game, not money.
It’s more like an investment in infrastructure. The city isn’t making a dime from repaving roads, but they certainly are useful. It’s a bit of a gamble if they’ll develop potholes or even get finnished sometimes, but people want roads.
Removed by mod
And people stay productive by enjoying hobbies and playing games. It’s an investment in infrastructure, just like fire, healthcare, police, power, water, transportation, etc.
Also, most roads in North America are cash negative, with many cities building new suburbs with high tax to pay for the roads in the previous suburb which are falling apart, which were built to pay for the next last suburb, on and on until the first car-centric suburbs were built in the 50s and 60s. Low density housing rarely pays for it’s public utilities directly, needing to essentially be subsidised by city centers to be worth it, and then you replace business with parking lots and everything gets so much worse…
Removed by mod
There are thousands of great game that wouldn’t have got off the ground without early access, so not participating could absolutely change the quality of the final product. In many ways, early access in one step removed from crowdsourcing, which is an investment in an idea.
Investments aren’t necessarily about leveraging capital to generate more capital. It would be a very sad life to live where everything must be categorized by ROI.