Kickstarter: Difference between revisions
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'''Kickstarter''' is one of many crowfunding sites where people can throw money at projects or create their own for others to throw money at. The types of projects themselves vary: tabletop games and video games, toys and merchandise, drones and [https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1359605477/ fucking submarines...] | '''Kickstarter''' is one of many crowfunding sites where people can throw money at projects or create their own for others to throw money at. The types of projects themselves vary: tabletop games and video games, toys and merchandise, drones and [https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1359605477/ fucking submarines...] | ||
==Explain?== | ==Explain?== | ||
What's to explain? | What's to explain? | ||
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...And sometimes that's [[Skub|sorta the problem]]. | ...And sometimes that's [[Skub|sorta the problem]]. | ||
==/tg/ related Kickstarters and how they fared== | |||
*[[White Wolf]] and its subsidiary, Onyx Path, have recently funded many of its [[World of Darkness]] [[RPG]]s via Kickstarter. All of them were met in record time (most of them within a couple of hours, some of them in under just over one hour) with several times the goal met. This results in a large number of stretch goals, many of whom include books that came out a lot later than promised. The worst offender is [[Wraith: The Oblivion]] 20th anniversary, which is going to come out in June 2015 and is going to do so for over two years now. | |||
*[[7th Sea]] funded its second edition via Kickstarter in 2015. They raked in a maddening $1,316,813 with 11,483, holding the record for the largest sum and most backers for a single RPG. The initial rules were due in October of 2016, but were instead released in ''June'' 2016, four months ahead of schedule. They have been less successful with their sourcebooks, with one being nine months overdue. | |||
*[[Kingdom Death]] is a tabletop game with crazy detailed resin miniatures sold at crazy high prices, and most of them are rather lewd. Raking in $12,3 million from under 20k backers, the backer tiers are pretty expensive, with the lowest for their Monster 1.5 set starting at $50. But people still pay because they really like what it brings to the table. | |||
*[[Mantic Games]] put two of its [[wargames]] on there: the sci-fi [[Warpath]] and the fantasy [[Kings of War]], raking in several times the goal to get funded. | |||
*[[Shieldwolf Miniatures]] did a Kickstarter to expand their miniature range. Asking but a lowly $5000, they got $20k and used that money to make miniatures that are totally not [[Warhammer Fantasy]] inspired and are not meant for proxies in your armies, we swear. | |||
*[[Shadowrun]] itself did not use Kickstarter, but the three recent videogames (Returns, Dragonfall, Hong Kong) based on it did successfully. | |||
*[[Order of the Stick]] funded the more recent printed volumes of the comic via Kickstarter. | |||
[[Category:Not related]] |
Revision as of 21:19, 26 September 2017
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Kickstarter is one of many crowfunding sites where people can throw money at projects or create their own for others to throw money at. The types of projects themselves vary: tabletop games and video games, toys and merchandise, drones and fucking submarines...
Explain?
What's to explain?
If you can picture it, you can advertise it and someone will fund it.
...And sometimes that's sorta the problem.
- White Wolf and its subsidiary, Onyx Path, have recently funded many of its World of Darkness RPGs via Kickstarter. All of them were met in record time (most of them within a couple of hours, some of them in under just over one hour) with several times the goal met. This results in a large number of stretch goals, many of whom include books that came out a lot later than promised. The worst offender is Wraith: The Oblivion 20th anniversary, which is going to come out in June 2015 and is going to do so for over two years now.
- 7th Sea funded its second edition via Kickstarter in 2015. They raked in a maddening $1,316,813 with 11,483, holding the record for the largest sum and most backers for a single RPG. The initial rules were due in October of 2016, but were instead released in June 2016, four months ahead of schedule. They have been less successful with their sourcebooks, with one being nine months overdue.
- Kingdom Death is a tabletop game with crazy detailed resin miniatures sold at crazy high prices, and most of them are rather lewd. Raking in $12,3 million from under 20k backers, the backer tiers are pretty expensive, with the lowest for their Monster 1.5 set starting at $50. But people still pay because they really like what it brings to the table.
- Mantic Games put two of its wargames on there: the sci-fi Warpath and the fantasy Kings of War, raking in several times the goal to get funded.
- Shieldwolf Miniatures did a Kickstarter to expand their miniature range. Asking but a lowly $5000, they got $20k and used that money to make miniatures that are totally not Warhammer Fantasy inspired and are not meant for proxies in your armies, we swear.
- Shadowrun itself did not use Kickstarter, but the three recent videogames (Returns, Dragonfall, Hong Kong) based on it did successfully.
- Order of the Stick funded the more recent printed volumes of the comic via Kickstarter.