This post is part of day five of itch.io week. We'll be interviewing developers all week. Learn more here: https://itch.io/week
Adam Saltsman is founder and director at Austin-based (for now!) developer and publisher Finji. Current projects by Finji include in-house project Overland , and publishing Night In The Woods.
View on itch.io:
http://finji.itch.io
Follow on Twitter: @ADAMATOMIC
i mean it depends on what "game" means BUT my first game is either a like QBASIC fortune-telling game when i was 12, or some counter-strike levels when i was 19, or some little Flash games when I was maybe 26-ish... or maybe like drawing Super Mario levels when I was 6? We used to draw our own board games when we were little too...
iiiii... I dunno. I guess the thing that sticks out to me is our tablet game Hundreds, which is definitely the high bar for us as far as accessible game design. My mom could play and enjoy most of that game, and so could my toddler kids... at the same time even. That was really cool, that felt like doing something meaningful.
I actually don't remember how we found it initially. I think I just liked that it was full of crazy stuff. I feel like Warp Door and the Free Indie Games blog before that are probably at least partly responsible for bringing me back there over and over. And all the game jams. There's just so many great experimental games on there. I think my first itch.io game was a free Flappy Bird fan-game called Flappybalt, which got cloned into a top 10 mobile game that is on a big LCD at the Austin airport now so ... make of that what you will haha.
Hmm. How far out on this limb do I want to go. So what I will say is I think that a storefront that is good for developers is a storefront that is good for our audience too. Things I value especially:
- tools for keeping people up to date really easily
- flexible and fair revenue shares
- minimal overhead for posting and maintaining the storefront
- good tools for controlling scope and price
- no gatekeepers
i think if a platform helps developers do their thing, that means we make more games and live longer, and that's maybe better for our audience than all the race-to-the-bottom scavenger tactics that dominate most other platforms.
i think honesty and transparency are the simplest and best approaches. if your game is relying on presales to fund development, make that clear to people that are buying in early. if your game actually needs a lot more than that even, make that clear. if you don't want feedback or a conversation, make that clear.
i think most folks are actually pretty smart about these things - there are some people that are happy to play an unfinished thing. there are lots of people that aren't. there are some people that don't mind rolling the dice, and other people that don't like to. just be clear about your status and your budget and your plans. otherwise it's like ... it's literally a scam haha
For Overland, Refinery let us do two things that are really important for this project:
- upload updates CONSTANTLY. we do a few builds a week, sometimes two builds in a single day. I can't be FTPing half-gig game zips all day on my dank DSL connection. the patcher / uploader tool has made a huge difference for us
- control the rate of access. we really wanted to start sharing Overland with our most intrepid audience members, but we have a long way to go. being able to set a hard cap on our playerbase is maybe a little counterintuitive but has been a huge help - in the first 24 hours I only got 1100 bug reports instead of like literally a million. this continues to be totally crucial for us
Steam has a nice backend for doing a ton of updates. Everything else we're doing is unique to itch.io (short of building our own patcher + financial backend)
We'll be running quasi-monthly rounds of First Access for the foreseeable future, and growing our community through that. We continue to push multiple builds a week with zero stress. itch.io is the premiere storefront for running alphas, in my opinion - the level of control and flexibility and freedom are totally unprecedented (again, short of rolling your own everything). Plus most of it is free open-source, so there's a nice in-between path too. itch.io is the best!!
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