It's not "tar-hand-ula"?
Parenthesis Press
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I've got two payouts in queue, one for 38 days, the other for 27 days.
The issue that keeps coming to mind for me:
If Itch is a successful website meant to support game designers working independently, then they should be pulling in enough money that they can afford to hire some more of the actual human reviewers they use to vet payouts.
If Itch is not successful enough to hire more staff, or is not meant to support designers at more than just a hobby level, then we should all question whether we continue using this site to platform our work. The "Itch is not a bank" argument doesn't hold water if the designers who want to make a career can't rely on Itch to at least get them their money in a window of time that would let them, say, pay rent or utilities.
This has been a blast of a jam, and I'm so happy to see all the great submissions people have added. Spread the love of diceless systems!
If your submission is in an incomplete state, no worries! Whether you got it in before the deadline or not, you can still post about it here with updates - consider this an established mini-community where we'd all love to hear about how the submissions continue to thrive and grow.
Finally, I want to encourage all participants, particularly in November (while the irons are still hot) to play, rate, and review each other's submissions. It would be awesome to tell people about what we've done here, and show your fellow participants their work was appreciated!
Thanks again to everyone who participated!
There are a few existing diceless systems that could be adopted, hacked, or scavenged, but there's also a golden opportunity to come up with something novel. I'm sure there will be plenty of attempts to find a way to hack existing systems that use dice, although of course that's tricky if you were wanting to do a PbtA design or something like that where the numbers matter. (I know Fate has a "Deck of Fate" that you can use in place of dice, which technically adheres to the letter of the jam, although it's arguable whether it's in the spirit).
As for artistic assets, always credit creators, respect intellectual property rights, and get permission.
I've played around with the idea of having dice be a resource in different game prototypes, but I haven't hit on a good implementation yet that makes it appealing to gamers. Lots of people are conditioned by existing game designs to equate "more dice" with "better" in pretty much all cases, even if one were to offer an incentive for trading in dice. Using coins would leverage the inherent "spendiness" of money to maybe overcome that.
Have you designed one before? Have you played any? Do you have any favorites?
I'll start: I've designed more diceless games than dice-driven games; I tend toward using cards, particularly Tarot cards, for my designs, but I'm also working on one that's inspired by Choose Your Own Adventure games combined with resource management, and I also have a game in the pipeline that uses hands of futhark runes for resolution. My favorite diceless game, and perhaps just favorite RPG of all time, is Jenna Moran's Nobilis (specifically the second edition), although I will defend the obscure diceless Marvel Universe RPG from 2003 as a better game than it gets credit for.
After some emails back and forth discussing the question with my publisher representative at DTRPG, the CEO, Steve Wieck, sent me this response:
"The short answer to your concern is that, yes, it’s a little bit crazy how we do things here. Most other marketplaces at all similar to us hold payments from sales far longer.
We are accepting a level of financial risk with our publisher payment process.
That said, we do take quite a number of precautions, but we don’t openly discuss those as general knowledge of them would allow bad actors to determine the best ways to game them."
Which is what I expected from the start: it's standard business practice not to publicly divulge exploitable details of financial practices. So, in short, you're probably not going to get a public run-down of what you asked for.
Ah, so you think I'm lying. Cool. Don't know what benefit I would gain from making this up, but whatever.
Here is a partial sales report of my DTRPG account from August 1 to August 10, 2019. I earned $3.25 from one sale, and $6.50 from another sale. I had previously withdrawn my royalty balance, so those two sales, total $9.75, are the sum available to me.
I initiated a payment for that royalty payment on August 11, 2019. The total included in the payout, shown here, is $9.75. That means money that had been paid to me by a customer less than 24 hours previously was included, not withheld.
Here's the receipt of the PayPal payment. The timestamp of the request, above, was 6:58pm, and I had the money in my PayPal, minus a $1 processing fee, the same day.
Satisfied?
Given that they've been running for 18 years now without having had such an issue come up, to my knowledge, they must have something figured out. None of the designers I know or have spoken to that use the site have ever heard of a significant case of fraud there. There's evidence that their policy used to be that they held royalties for 60 days before allowing withdrawal, but that's clearly no longer the case. As for refunds, they offer it as store credit only.
True, I'm not using those services. I'd heard bad things about Gumroad for other reasons, and Leanpub has never crossed my radar until now. DriveThruRPG is my other major storefront, which is the one I was referring to in the original post; if someone tweets me that they bought my game there, it's already in my available balance by the time I've pointed my browser there, and I can hit a button to get my money sent to PayPal instantaneously.
That makes me wonder why other platforms aren't apparently able (or willing?) to provide that level of responsiveness.
Because it seriously needs to be revamped. It's WAY too slow: no other site that I'm using to sell my games requires me to wait 7 days after a payment has been made to even request to receive the money, and they CERTAINLY don't take weeks to actually act on that request. If I can't reliably receive the income that my games are generating in a reasonably prompt manner, why should I point people to itch.io to buy my stuff when I could direct them to another platform that will literally have my money all the way in my bank account within minutes of the transaction?
I'm running Dungeon World right now and enjoy it a lot. It's not perfect, but it's fast and easy to get new players into the action (I have two players who have never touched an RPG before).
Spire is easily the most flavorful read I've encountered in years, and it's next on my list to run.
Nobilis 2nd edition is the game that spoke to my soul and convinced me to start designing "professionally".
Might I humbly suggest my own games? A bunch of them are free, and all of them are cheap.
I'm Neal (he/him), and I've been playing RPGs since the 1984 D&D red box; I started making my own games in 1990, but first did so "professionally" (as in, made them publicly available and for sale) in 2012. I have an inordinate fondness for heavily narrative games, card-driven or diceless mechanics, mythology and symbolism, cats, coffee, and esoterica. Most of my work that's worth noting is here on Itch, over on DriveThruRPG, or on my site parenthesispress.com.
I ran and participated in a game jam last year, and I'm working on a game for the Roll to Craft Jam right now. I like the opportunity to get those straggler ideas out of my head that wouldn't make the cut for turning into a "major" project. Game jams often fit the bill for staying creative between big games, too.