It was THIS close to becoming a demo

  • Johanno
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    231 year ago

    Problem is that if you intent to monetize it then you might “accidentally” make a good game that is installed a lot and maybe you charged 5$ upfront via steam. Now you come by the 200k$ threshold and have to pay steam 30% and assuming worst case you have 500k installs.

    Meaning you owe now unity 100k$.

    So 200k - 60(steam)-100k is 40k$

    You have now 40$ left to produce your game.

    Even worse. If you have now stopped selling the game due to reasons. People reinstalling it will cost you 20 Cent

    • @piecat
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      21 year ago

      So wait. If I bought a game they can just brick it down the road?

      • @Yokozuna
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        1 year ago

        Well yea, if you buy any digital game anywhere but GoG, I don’t know any others that have policies like theirs, you’re basically just renting it, you dont buy the game you just buy the license. GoG has a system set up to where you actually own the game, and if they went out of business tomorrow, you could still play your games fine.

        Let’s say you happen to buy a game or dlc off of a second-hand site and redeem it on steam, origin, or whatever launcher. You use it, and it works, and you play for a while, no problem. Well, if that key you bought is flagged for whatever reason, and the publishers of said game can decide to revoke the license you bought, and that’s a wrap. Because that’s all you’re buying, even straight from steam or anywhere else - just a license. I used the second-hand website as an example because it does happen there. I haven’t really heard anything happening on legit purchases straight from a vendor, but the legal wording is all there, and what I described is possible.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      $200k divided by $5 is 40,000 sales. You aren’t likely to have 500k installs from 40,000 sales…