Why 96% of Indie Games Fail

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  • Опубликовано: 9 фев 2024
  • Only about 4% of games turn a profit. So how do you succeed as an indie game developer?
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    📃 Research Links
    Only 4% of games turn a profit, According to the Electronic Entertainment Design and Research institute
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    Sokpop games
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    75% of the developers on Steam have only released 1 game
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    Dunkey JRPG video
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Комментарии • 697

  • @GoingIndie
    @GoingIndie  2 месяца назад +92

    What's the hardest part of game development?
    🟥 Grow your indie studio and support the channel!
    www.patreon.com/GoingIndie

    • @WUGH
      @WUGH 2 месяца назад +12

      Promotion

    • @Spaceman20150
      @Spaceman20150 2 месяца назад +1

      Making the war planes/star fighters fun to fly
      Jk it actually is marketing and perseverance

    • @Teimberar
      @Teimberar 2 месяца назад +5

      Making the textures

    • @DarkBloodbane
      @DarkBloodbane 2 месяца назад +3

      Fitting the game to suit player's likes. That is excluding obvious issues such as personal finance and marketing.

    • @user-fb4vl9mh5j
      @user-fb4vl9mh5j 2 месяца назад +4

      1. Developing the games.
      2. Understanding the market climate.
      3. Being Solo-Dev.
      4. Doesn't have a strong computer.
      5. Fighting against laziness.

  • @smb1397
    @smb1397 2 месяца назад +440

    TLDR: game dev is more like opening a startup than simply making a game

    • @sheikhsadab
      @sheikhsadab 2 месяца назад +24

      Depends a lot on your goal I believe.

    • @nursultannazarov8379
      @nursultannazarov8379 Месяц назад +11

      ​@@sheikhsadabduuuuh

    • @johnsimon8457
      @johnsimon8457 Месяц назад

      You’re building the factory to make the thing rather than the thing itself.

    • @jabbathehott9321
      @jabbathehott9321 14 дней назад

      And that's after you've simply made the game, which is a very complex task in itself.

  • @katlicks
    @katlicks 2 месяца назад +1162

    Something I always keep in mind is that Scott Cawthon made 72 games before FNAF, and FNAF was his first big success.
    It wasn't even the biggest thing he made or was most excited about. But the guy kept going, kept making games, he'd been making games for 18 years at that point and was working at a dollar store when he made it. It was made in response to feedback calling his stuff creepy and animatronic like.

    • @lisatroiani6119
      @lisatroiani6119 2 месяца назад +65

      in fact, fnaf was originally going to be his last game

    • @LuisSierra42
      @LuisSierra42 2 месяца назад +30

      @@lisatroiani6119 just the same with Final Fantasy

    • @Dave-rd6sp
      @Dave-rd6sp 2 месяца назад +91

      It's also important to remember that FNAF (as it was released) could have easily failed, a completely forgotten game, if it didn't win the RUclipsr lottery. More evidence that success is a numbers game. Keep making games until one gets noticed.

    • @musashi542
      @musashi542 2 месяца назад

      @@lisatroiani6119 jesus

    • @fredrickmansav6852
      @fredrickmansav6852 2 месяца назад +8

      that christian white work ethic though

  • @itsmeruka
    @itsmeruka 2 месяца назад +250

    11:43 a recent indie dev that made great marketing was VA Proxy ''you can parry a nuke''

    • @chucklesdeclown8819
      @chucklesdeclown8819 2 месяца назад +25

      I SAW THAT GAME ON IRON PINEAPPLES CHANNEL. that game looks awesome.

    • @jabbathehott9321
      @jabbathehott9321 14 дней назад +1

      Nice, I just Googled it. It looks a lot like NieR Automato, which is good.

  • @luisgentil
    @luisgentil 2 месяца назад +126

    I've heard similar advice coming from several areas of software development.
    1 - Find intrinsic motivation in what you do. Don't think you can wear yourself out until you find success, because you're more likely to collapse before that. Development doesn't get easier, there's always new problems. You better like the process of solving them.
    2 - Get feedback. It doesn't matter how long or hard you worked on something, it will break on sometime else's hand. The sooner you can get others to test your product the better.
    3 - You always get something out of every project you deliver in the form of growth and experience that can't be measured. Don't get attached to your creations and ideas. Many people don't even start because they fear their idea will be stolen and they won't get credit. Think that the real value is in you and not what you create, and always give your best because it's the kind of stuff that the more you give, the more you have.

    • @dondahighhh12
      @dondahighhh12 Месяц назад

      just really good life advice too

  • @stevenmaswabi-zz9kt
    @stevenmaswabi-zz9kt 2 месяца назад +409

    "The riches are in the niches"
    -Alex Hormozi.

    • @SimGunther
      @SimGunther 2 месяца назад +2

      Any "richie rich" gonna buy a $5000 new release game? That's just weird...

    • @TeppuTeppu
      @TeppuTeppu 2 месяца назад +3

      @@SimGunther that is why companies like gaccha games

    • @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120
      @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120 2 месяца назад +11

      @@SimGunther No but niche games usually dont have much competion and can afford to not go on sale because... who is going to replace them?

    • @Dashmaster305
      @Dashmaster305 2 месяца назад +16

      Was it pronounced, "The reeshes are in the niches"?

    • @Sound_Tech
      @Sound_Tech 2 месяца назад

      ​@@lelagrangeeffectphysics4120 Factorio has never gone on sale

  • @AzadB
    @AzadB 2 месяца назад +265

    We are 2 devs, we made $150k on our first game (Bonding Ambivalence on Steam) by filling a niche. Indeed it's very important to analyze your sub-market! In our case, we started with an idea that our friends liked, then broadened the execution by mixing game styles that we liked (Dead Space, We Were Here, Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes etc.).
    We're trying to develop a second one, but we don't know if we'll be able to go through with it, we feel like we're starting from scratch against giants who occupy people's full attention. This is the most difficult and psychologically exhausting experience of our lives. On the other hand, the feeling of being in steam's top 400 for a few hours is a once-in-a-lifetime experience. Let's see where it goes!

    • @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120
      @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120 2 месяца назад +5

      You mean... that french swat, blade runner game?

    • @AzadB
      @AzadB 2 месяца назад +8

      @@lelagrangeeffectphysics4120
      Yes that game, cyberpunk coop but with some horror and technical puzzles 😅

    • @azerim2039
      @azerim2039 2 месяца назад +2

      How long did it take you to make it? Were you making it full time?

    • @AzadB
      @AzadB 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@azerim2039 I was alone on the project for a year and a half (it was full time and it was very, very intense, 9 to 11 hours of work every day including week ends/holidays), then there were two of us for testing and playtest feedback. A total of two years of development.
      Note that it wasn't exactly my first game, I'd been practicing with my friends under the radar to create very simplified mini escape games before Bonding Ambivalence. I was able to develop 3D and programming skills. So I'm not starting from scratch in terms of skills.

    • @Greedshot
      @Greedshot 2 месяца назад +3

      Hey! I know your game! I like that you were successful!

  • @minze202
    @minze202 2 месяца назад +90

    It's easy to see why most indie devs stop after 1 game. I mean, many spend several years on a game and they probably think it's hard to justify another commitment like that with the risk of another failure.

    • @anonymeforliberty4387
      @anonymeforliberty4387 Месяц назад +26

      and you can't lose twice your saved up money, just once

    • @sinkingdutchman7227
      @sinkingdutchman7227 Месяц назад +12

      Yeah, we only have a limited time on earth after all... you will ask yourself if making another game that might just as well flop is the best use of that time

    • @merccc1
      @merccc1 22 дня назад +1

      @@sinkingdutchman7227 That is the mistake. The goal being just a reward rather enjoying the process itself first, like a hobby. If you enjoy it, it is not a waste. You usually then do better work, do it more, and eventually make a hit that takes off thanks to that accumulation of passion enjoying the process of creation and growing talent.

    • @sinkingdutchman7227
      @sinkingdutchman7227 14 дней назад +2

      @@merccc1 if you want to get far, you cannot treat it like an ordinary hobby though. It's at least as demanding as a second job. And it will consume a large part of your life.
      It can still be rewarding. But think very hard what kind of investment you are making, and what other things in life will necessarily take their toll.

    • @merccc1
      @merccc1 14 дней назад

      @@sinkingdutchman7227 Of course it is also demanding, but that makes it all the more important that you enjoy the process foremost before anything else. It helps keep you motivated and to push through difficult road blocks and long stretches of work. Not to mention, it is far more likely that your more inspired and optimistic about the game; Thus come up with better, more enjoyable systems than if you were dully just trying to get through the process like it is a chore. This also results in higher potential to make a hit that sales well and makes it worthwhile not just as enjoyment, but as a job. Never underestimate passion, it usually more often than not, gives better results.

  • @inaridefucc8904
    @inaridefucc8904 2 месяца назад +333

    I feel like this is good advice on paper, but pretty bad advice in practice. You basically pinpoint a roadmap to create a relatively successful average game that will make, in the best realistic outcome, significantly less than an average job in any other fields. In other words, you're saying "just create another gatcha/coc clone". As another person in the comment section put it "if you want to make money, do something else". You're greatly underestimating the sheer importance of creative vision, what you said about the market doesn't actually resonate with the player-base or with the recent history of game titles. "Why do AAA games succeed while indie games fail?" well because they can rely on a much stronger infrastructure both economically and practically, but while that is true in terms of sole numbers, in the last 20 years triple AAA titles ALWAYS LOST in terms of relative cost of production (compared to financial success) against the most liked indie games of the year, most of which come from anonymous, single developers hungry for innovation. From the Binding of Isaac, to Terraria, to Minecraft, to Lethal Company or Among Us, indie titles made by small studios have completely eclipsed huge game developers that, precisely by following marketing trends like you suggest, create corporate slob gaming experiences that people only like so much. If you genuinely believe titles like modern Pokemon games are better than the average fad indie game of the month because they make more money (and they only do because once again they can rely on unsinkable corporate ships, not because they actually create good products) than you're not really in the position to give advice. While yes, I agree that you should research your market and be more pragmatical on your developing process, at the same time you should remember that if you don't have a personal vision that allows for the creation of something new and worthwhile, then you're just better off getting another job.

    • @Zack-bl2gg
      @Zack-bl2gg 2 месяца назад +51

      You forgot to mention that EVERY single game you mentioned either came out before the golden age of indie games, became successful through flash or some other method, or followed his steps.
      Or just complete blind luck, among us became popular years after it came out, simply because of covid.
      Let’s take among us though, and run with it. It’s not that original of an idea, it’s just Mafia and then some steps. It took the genra and put its own twist, and ran with it.
      It was advertised among kids and party game people during covid, when that was much needed.
      Aaaand it wasn’t made for years and years and years, it’s a relatively simple game pushed out in a reasonable amount of time.
      Not all AAA games are soulless, not all indie games are full of creativity. You use all of these tricks to your advantage to find the best of everything.

    • @curts7801
      @curts7801 2 месяца назад +9

      You mentioned 4 that made it, but for those 4 that made it, 96 games crashed and burned.
      The numbers don’t lie.
      The odds are not in your favor. You have to rig the odds through business acumen if you want a meaningful chance to win.

    • @inaridefucc8904
      @inaridefucc8904 2 месяца назад +27

      @@curts7801 The number is likely even smaller, that's the truth for every business, and it's even worse for creative endevoirs. Still, winning big and losing hard is always much better than breeding mediocrity. As for the first comment, your idea of "Golden Age of Indie gaming" expands pretty far, since Lethal Company came out a year ago (so no, not EVERY one of them). Let me give you some other names so maybe you might get it: Celeste, Hades, Disco Elysium, Hollow Knight, Vampire Survivor, To The Moon, Dead Cells, Hotline Miami, Doki Doki Lc, Spelunky, Enter the Gungeon, Limbo, Soma, Omori, Eastward. A good percentage of these came out in the last 5 years. Dredge, Cocoon, Venba, Pizza Tower and Viewfinder were the top 5 best debut indie titles for the Gaming Awards just last year, and every one of them met great financial success. The Golden Age of Indie never stopped, that's the truth. Pursue passion, pursue creative vision, revolutionize the market, or else just give up, it's not worth it.

    • @dnaderelmasry7973
      @dnaderelmasry7973 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@inaridefucc8904Okay good, you mentioned 10 more games out of tens of thousands that came out and utterly failed to even break even. Your argument is that indies make more money than triple A companies, which isn't true when you consider that indies take much, much longer to develop than the average triple A game nowadays. Actual creativity and effort doesn't matter compared to marketing; you can make the next Deus Ex game and it won't blow up unless you either got very lucky or had a lot of contacts.

    • @ehyehasherehyeh3304
      @ehyehasherehyeh3304 2 месяца назад +6

      I don't understand how research of the market can be against personal vision, I think you got too offended by the "market" word and forget that he never said you should create a new gacha game.

  • @CodeMonkeyUnity
    @CodeMonkeyUnity 2 месяца назад +269

    Really great video! The commercial stats are indeed a bit depressing but being able to build and play something you built yourself is a magical feeling!

    • @tNag556
      @tNag556 2 месяца назад +9

      I've recently been able to test my coop game with some people and just watching other people discover the map you already know by heart, see them trying to solve the puzzles you've done and tested for amillion times and having some laughs with it is priceless.

    • @Francisco-Gutierrez
      @Francisco-Gutierrez Месяц назад +1

      I read this with CodeMonkey's voice in my head.

  • @Yourwaifuisntreal
    @Yourwaifuisntreal Месяц назад +10

    I'd also would say that not saturating the market with mediocre pixel art, rogue-like, souls-like, metroidvanias, etc, is something to take into consideration.

  • @zejugames5045
    @zejugames5045 2 месяца назад +42

    Felt like this video didn't really distinguish between continuous and discontinuous innovation. The Henry Ford quote refers to discontinuous change, like how Apple launched the iPod and iPhone. Along those lines, genre innovation or mashups can see outsized success for a small gamedev team.
    Continuous change means a much more competitive and incremental market.

  • @ThomasStewartDev
    @ThomasStewartDev 2 месяца назад +59

    This is my favorite video of yours yet! (And not just because you highlighted my game 😅)
    I’ve fallen in love with the development process of game creation - I hadn’t thought of it in those terms before, but it’s such a good point that the process is more valuable than the singular game I may be working on at the time.
    Thanks for the awesome video!

  • @dreamteckstudio
    @dreamteckstudio 2 месяца назад +156

    Something that comes up again and again on YT is indie devs making their "dream game". I'm so glad that this video is tapping into that "Dream game" mentality. Your dream is not everyone else's dream. It's either a hobby or a job and if you want to do this as a job, you gotta make your player base's dream game. ...said a studio that goes by the name of DREAMteck xD

    • @Guy-cb1oh
      @Guy-cb1oh 2 месяца назад +36

      I disagree. You should absolutely make the game you yourself would want to play. Because there would be heart and passion behind it as opposed to a game that's just made to chase popular trends. Afterall if the developer doesn't like the game they're making why would anyone else.

    • @dreamteckstudio
      @dreamteckstudio 2 месяца назад +47

      @@Guy-cb1oh unfortunately the business side of things is not concerned with heart and passion. Balance is key. You should enjoy what you're doing but taylor the product to your target audience.

    • @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120
      @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120 2 месяца назад +13

      @@Guy-cb1oh Define heart and passion, does it mean the game has, extra details and looks a bit better?
      That it is magically better?
      The situation is that A: people usually dont recognize "passion" and B relying on word of mouth is a recipe for disaster, think of word of mouth as a bonus not your mainstay in marketing and yes, sometimes it does cost money.
      Games are more like movies than painted art, its a business.

    • @xei2694
      @xei2694 2 месяца назад +22

      @@dreamteckstudio People who buy indie games (and games in general) definitely are concerned with heart and passion. Of course, the game also has to be good. Looking outside the indie sphere, Daikatana and Balan Wonderworld had heart and passion, but they were commercial failures because they were not good.

    • @Guy-cb1oh
      @Guy-cb1oh 2 месяца назад +6

      ​@@xei2694right. And the opposite can be true too. Games that are technically good but have no soul to them.

  • @seraphin01
    @seraphin01 Месяц назад +14

    ego is a big part of everyone's problems.. and we ALL do that mistake. We've worked SO hard on a project, spent days researching, working etc just to get a random schmuk telling us we're doing something wrong.. and we can't take the critic and just dismiss it.
    we're all guilty of that at one point, overcoming this will change your life

    • @saycap
      @saycap 15 дней назад

      I’m convinced you can’t go wrong if you live by the valve philosophy. playtest playtest playtest playtest playtest playtest playtest playtest playtest playtest playtest. Playtest when you only have like two things in your game. Playtest with everyone all the time. And then you take the feedback into consideration and you end up with Portal

  • @xanmal7042
    @xanmal7042 2 месяца назад +9

    See, I am making a game I WANT. not to sell, not to make money, not to succeed to others. I am making the game I have always wanted and never found. it might take years or even centuries. its my hobby and I enjoy it. I will iterate over it millions of times to get it the way I WANT it. I have no reason to give up, nothing to stop me or slow me.

    • @Timbermannetje
      @Timbermannetje 25 дней назад

      If you want to live as a hermit, it is totally fine!

    • @ftgodlygoose4718
      @ftgodlygoose4718 16 дней назад

      If ur making a passion project then why even watch a video like this 😂

    • @saycap
      @saycap 15 дней назад

      That’s fine but games are meant to be played. If you don’t do any playtests and after twenty years you finally finish your baby to show the world, throwing it into the wind, people end up finding more particular issues with it than you could ever ever ever find yourself. You need feedback to make a good game. Period. All of your favorite games had tons and tons of player feedback and your game will not be an exception.

  • @wimu7957
    @wimu7957 2 месяца назад +83

    been thinking of making a indie game m a web dev and didnt study game dev but its a hobby of mine to learn how game dev works nice having videos like this

    • @hairyballbastic8943
      @hairyballbastic8943 2 месяца назад

      best of luck! would love to play

    • @kars6026
      @kars6026 2 месяца назад

      Yeah good luck, you'll need it. It's not an easy task xD

    • @ADreamingTraveler
      @ADreamingTraveler Месяц назад +1

      Always start out small when you first start making games. And always keep an eye on just how big the game is getting through development to keep it in scope or it will become unmanageable. A lot of devs that start out making their first games end up making games that are way too big at first and suffer and fail because of that because it ends up never getting finished

    • @MosesMatsepane
      @MosesMatsepane Месяц назад

      Start Small, and release quickly. You will be surprised by the amount of work required to deploy even a simple game on Steam or Play Stores. The Logos, Marketing Materials, Promotional Content, Videos, etc...Making a game is one thing, deploying a game to the world is something else all together.

  • @dogsbecute
    @dogsbecute Месяц назад +4

    My best friend made a cute little flash game in college where he created all the art in MS paint, and made the characters Pixels that he also created in MS Paint, and it was a small platformer with witty commentary (he wasnt a witty dude, hes so chill and down to earth so it was pretty interesting) and he wasnt selling it, but it was pretty popular on campus. I was playing it during lunch and someone asked me what it was and when i told him, he asked for a copy and next thing i knew quite a few people were playing it and coming up to him and telling him how fun it is. He did 0 research, and doesnt create games today (he grew out of that phase sadly...), but i truly believe if he stuck to that and created games that he likes to play, he wouldve created a hit or 2 by now.

  • @DarkReaperK97
    @DarkReaperK97 2 месяца назад +11

    Solo Indie devs don't make games because of money. I mean yeah the money is a bonus to look forward to. But they do it mainly for passion. They want their art out there.

  • @mithogui
    @mithogui 2 месяца назад +11

    this was one of the most eye opening videos on game dev I've ever seen. Also loved the amount of shout outs to other gaming channels, felt like a cross over. And props on pulling off that awesome Ted lasso 'stache!

  • @uheartbeast
    @uheartbeast 2 месяца назад +16

    Lots of good advice in this video. I was very surprised to be quoted right at the start.

  • @eccentricstylist
    @eccentricstylist 2 месяца назад +42

    Thanks for the awesome video as always!
    Currently working on a 2D indie game myself/ solo (in addition to a full-time job), really found this insightful -- especially the idea of where to put the passion. Reminds me a lot of what they teach us about startups -- fail early, fail fast.
    With that being said, I can only hope I am in the right direction haha XD

  • @FirstCrimson
    @FirstCrimson 2 месяца назад +7

    Super well made video, thanks for taking the time to deliver points in a super clean way. It's surprising the amount of indie devs that question why their game didn't sell well and completely ignore the business side of the whole thing.

  • @googlekopfkind
    @googlekopfkind 2 месяца назад +34

    One should definitely create the game they're excited about. It doesn't make sense to focus on pleasing others because otherwise, you'll lose motivation in the process. Anyone who doesn't understand this has absolutely no clue about game development. There is no long-term motivation if one does not do what they themselves are enthusiastic about. I made this mistake and completely lost my motivation over several years because instead of being innovative, I simply conformed to the market

    • @theresnothinghere1745
      @theresnothinghere1745 2 месяца назад +17

      Honestly its the same thing for most creative mediums.
      If you want to learn to draw my best advice is draw the thing most on your mind, you're going to need all the motivation you can.
      Don't save it for when you're good or you will never start, if you really want to do it later then just draw it again after a year or so.

    • @SLSat
      @SLSat 2 месяца назад +4

      That's a tough thing to balance. On one hand I make games because I want to have fun and do things I like, regardless of being successful (which is pretty subjective if you ask me). However, if you want to make money, there's not much of a choice: need to do market research, see if this idea will sell, be realistic with what "success" you will get (if you will ever get any). Oh well

  • @fumetsusozo
    @fumetsusozo 2 месяца назад +8

    I fall more into the mindset of I can't fail long as I created what I truly wanted. I don't really care much about the money or how many folk play it, I create to see my dreams come true, which can never be a waste of time. Also yes it is good to research who your main viewership will be ahead of time, but I will argue to be careful with boxing yourself into certain genres & cliches to much, as that can lead to just copying what other people do instead of making something that feels creative & natural... I hate media that feels overly checklisty in how it was made.

  • @ryanmckenzie5918
    @ryanmckenzie5918 2 месяца назад +1

    Your point about marketing adding value to the viewer is something that hits me with a lot of RUclips videos. I see a thumbnail, a title, and the channel name, and my first questions are ALWAYS "Why should I care?" and "Why should I trust you?". It's a topic I've been thinking about a lot lately, and if you have more content on that, it would be a must-watch for me.
    First of your videos I've seen, and you've earned my sub! Awesome stuff here.

  • @VinciWare
    @VinciWare 2 месяца назад +7

    Solid video through and through. Saving (and subscribing) so I can come back and watch in a few months!
    Cheers!

  • @marioruiz481
    @marioruiz481 2 месяца назад +2

    Nice Video Man!, I was sad by the end but that twist to a happy ending was excellent.

  • @farmerfreakeasy9577
    @farmerfreakeasy9577 2 месяца назад +27

    This is a really well narrated video and you make some very valid points along the way. But can i just say the video leaves a rather bitter after taste. The reason ? The main point of the video seems to be that you should research your markets better, and let the market dictate your final product. Or in other words i feel that the message of this video is that you've only succeeded if your final product is a commercial success.
    Many creative projects are finished and released(especially in the world of music) and never amass a suitable financial reward despite being of huge value to those who've discovered and appreciated the product. In the world of music "commercial success" is often equated to: "creative failure". Just because an album is platinum it doesn't necessarily mean the finished product is of creative worth. Some of the biggest contemporary albums/videogames/movies will ultimately be forgotten about in the history vaults 100 years down the line whilst creative niche classics are eventually pulled out and hailed as being before their time.
    My advice would be to make a videogame that you respect yourself. If you're worried about paying the bills then allocate your time for dual purpose creativity: make the commercial game(that you still respect) whilst allocating an amount of by-time to the more risky, experimental project, that you don't just respect but deeply love.
    We should never forget that videogames are an artform. An artist which focuses more on money than creativity will always be distracted from their upmost creative potential. Money tends to corrupt and curtail art, not unleash a pure imaginarium built for a spiritual purpose.

    • @mtg-dev
      @mtg-dev 2 месяца назад +2

      Exactly my thoughts throughout the whole video. 💯
      That's why it's rare now to see AAA companies creating anything creative or new, just a shinier version of an existing game that is according to their research will be a commercial success. Creativity is risky, and there's no way around this.
      Most of my favourite and most memorable games in the past 6 years have been indie games, and I'd bet that many of them weren't that much of a commercial success, and I'd also bet that their creators weren't building them for the sake of making tons of money out of them, they just had a vision that they wanted to bring to life.
      There are tons of other ways to making a lot of money in a more guaranteed way, and game development is mostly not one of them.

    • @samh8296
      @samh8296 Месяц назад +2

      Well, he did say in the video "Success is a matter of perspective." I think this video is pretty valuable for teams who are trying to ensure that their time and money invested isn't put to waste. Individuals and small groups who are happy to just make something probably don't need to worry about profit anyway; but if you have your jobs on the line then it probably would be smart to tip the scales in your team's favor.

  • @lethaldosegame
    @lethaldosegame 2 месяца назад +10

    "don't take everything to heart" accompanied by a shot of Phil Fish 🤣

  • @combativeroboguy2490
    @combativeroboguy2490 2 месяца назад +7

    I was just doing something else with this in the background when I heard “to quote The Way of Kings” I froze and second guessed whose video I was watching. Stormlight is one of my favorites too, I love that you chose that quote.

    • @Algardraug
      @Algardraug 2 месяца назад

      What is the most important step a man kan take? Is also fitting for this, but that's from a later book!

  • @BBkeeper
    @BBkeeper 2 месяца назад +3

    2:49 The Stormlight Archive is my favorite series too. "Life before death, strength before weakness, journey before destination" is my all time favorite passage in literature.

  • @Eu__sunt
    @Eu__sunt 2 месяца назад +27

    I get what you're saying and agree with most of your takes.
    But I think this business & market-oriented games will always lack creativity and originality or at least the devs will have to sacrifice a small part of it's creativity and originality.
    And I personally feel that this is exactly what we need right now, as the AAA studios give us mostly games that feel like a hollow copy of a copy and that's the reason I prefer to look for Indie Games in the first place, because they actually bring something new.

    • @farmerfreakeasy9577
      @farmerfreakeasy9577 2 месяца назад +16

      I just wrote a whole comment saying pretty much the same thing. Thinking about money is the problem not the solution. The current videogame "crash" and multiple layoffs is surely instigated by greed and a lack of creative spirit.

    • @omerozkaya2856
      @omerozkaya2856 2 месяца назад +9

      You can still have creativity and properly market a product. A lot of people in the comments section just sound like they only want to focus on one aspect of game dev. Production isn't the only thing you can focus on if you want your game to be successful. Also, you can 'want' money and also 'want' a creative game; they're not mutually exclusive. Cutting corners will just make your spirit weaken as a developer if you can't seem to get the results you're expecting.

    • @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120
      @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120 2 месяца назад

      @@farmerfreakeasy9577 the layoffs are routine, they are done to impress investors and show that they are "responsible" with their spending by trimming down on cost and people, most companies are not exactly at risk of falling out unless they do something stupid, they know what their audiences are, and the audiences will eat it up.

    • @farmerfreakeasy9577
      @farmerfreakeasy9577 2 месяца назад +4

      @@lelagrangeeffectphysics4120Still, i think the current layoffs are definitely a result of greed in the industry. On a multi-faceted level. Who wants to buy an incomplete, bugged game, that was released early due to greed. Who wants to buy a download you can no longer share with anyone else. Who wants to buy a PS5 when they're still happy with their PS3or PS4. Who wants to buy a game which prods you for micro-transactions continuously. It's greed on a multi-faceted level. Players won't tolerate this financial mentality.

    • @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120
      @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120 2 месяца назад

      @@farmerfreakeasy9577 Mobile tells us otherwise.

  • @newtforgegames
    @newtforgegames 2 месяца назад +6

    Very inspirational, I've been trying to figure out ways to spruce up my own devlogs and find that right audience!

  • @userdetails1
    @userdetails1 2 месяца назад +25

    Because the market is now over-saturated? For example after seeing how successful Vampire Survivors (auto-shooter, waves of enemies, upgrades that make you way OP) was the number of copycats of it are now in the hundreds. It basically became so successful it became a genre. How can you make money when your game is up against 200 others that are almost identical?

    • @somnorila9913
      @somnorila9913 2 месяца назад +6

      That game is like Flappy bird, not really a game to consume like an experience, sort of like a good movie, but something more like something to do on your phone instead of talking to people or burning some time until something you have to do. And these small simple games may be a lot of them are also incomplete and of poor quality. So you can compete by standing out with a minimum effort really, finish the game and put in the time to polish it.

    • @admiralkaede
      @admiralkaede 2 месяца назад +12

      exactly not all indie games are good

    • @Ornithopter470
      @Ornithopter470 Месяц назад +2

      The funniest thing here is that vampire survivor is basically all those terrible mobile game ads. That genre already existed.

  • @frazierinsurancebroker
    @frazierinsurancebroker 2 месяца назад +6

    Wow, you nailed it right in the head!
    I literally was asking Tim Cain on his channel for advice, because we haven't been able to, not only not return a profit for any game we worked on till now, but we can't even finish them for the high cost and devtime of making a game that "might" sell. We have been focusing solely on landing a deal with a publisher and failed each time.
    Someone read my comment and was like "bro, here are some GDC videos, look at what Super Meat Boy did and good luck!" and I was like, man, if it was only that easy.
    Gamedev is hard, but doing it in a thirld world country must be a challenge from the gods.
    I've been doing this for 11 years and not published a single game. 30 unreleased prorotypes (with huge preproduction times) and 3-4 of them almost on production phase with a nice vertical slice.
    Finishing a game is the first threshold and its already a high mountain to cross. Cause, its not only the idea, or the process, but the team and the tools you develop along it.
    Everytime we failed, we scope down. Currently we are working on something that we know we can finish and publish on our own.
    But like you said, I don't know if we'll be able to surivve for 3 more games or something in the numbers of John Romero.
    But hey, at least we must try! Hopefully if you enjoy the process and making the game, then it's not so hard when it flops and fails miserably.
    Great video, man! Really needed it.

  • @marscaleb
    @marscaleb 2 месяца назад +3

    When you talk about listening to the right people, I am right away reminded of Salt and Sanctuary. They brought in all these playtesters and almost all of them complained that the game was too hard. But only one of them was a fan of Dark Souls. That one tester was the only one they listened to, because all the others weren't interested in their game to begin with.

  • @no2475
    @no2475 Месяц назад +1

    The key is basically to have a combination of good visuals that catch the eye and inspire, have fun and engaging gameplay that has enough complexity and feels polished enough that it doesn't feel like some school project, and of course good marketing. There is a shitload of indie devs that upload small projects with boring visuals and zero marketing, which is why the stats look so daunting. This is probably what you should be doing if you're starting off. Just spam a ton of small projects, and learn form each one. You will, eventually, reach a point where you become skilled enough to create something with quality visuals and gameplay, and back it up with some good marketing. Obviously easier said than done.
    Oh, and don't neglect the audio and animations.

  • @GenericInternetter
    @GenericInternetter Месяц назад +1

    A good trick to avoid being sucked into a passion idea is to make a large list of game ideas before choosing one. Aim for 50.
    40 of them will be crap or unoriginal; Dump them. (The 80-20 rule)
    Of the remaining 10, 8 will be good but too big for a first project; Save them for later. (The 80-20 rule again)
    Then you're left with 2. Pick one of those 2 and stick to it. You'll often wonder if you should have chosen the other one, but then you'll realize you'd be asking the same question about this idea if you had chosen otherwise.

  • @rlwatson-dev
    @rlwatson-dev 2 месяца назад +1

    This is all helpful information! I've been working on an indie game for a while myself and recently started to learn about the business side of development. Hopefully I'm doing more right than wrong! Finding passion on the journey is good advice across a lot of endeavors, especially anything creative.

  • @curts7801
    @curts7801 2 месяца назад +1

    Thanks for making this, Cam! This was a great look into the business side of gaming, a facet that not nearly enough people give love to.
    I for one am extremely interested in a video going into marketing for games. I’m one of those oddballs who’s more interested in marketing games than making them. The happy tanks party game failing to gain traction from a Counterstrike video was an eye opener, and told me that there’s a LOT to learn about marketing.
    Thanks again.

  • @XionSteel
    @XionSteel 2 месяца назад +3

    It's something i notice in some indie games i buy is that they either try to do too much or too little and you can see what they were trying to do but could never really tell when they got off track. I'll sometimes buy something to pass the time and dont get very far in before i want to play anything else, i sometimes buy something that looks substantial but tries to throw in something unique and it just doesn't make the game that fun.
    This is coming from someone who hasn't really made a game, but i have played a wide range of both good and bad.

  • @CodingAbroad
    @CodingAbroad 2 месяца назад +8

    My steam game just barely made all the money back. But the vicious comments I got was brutal and stomped my passion to want to make another

    • @elbarriotrucker
      @elbarriotrucker 2 месяца назад +4

      What's your game? I'll give it a chance.

    • @Cjoudan
      @Cjoudan 2 месяца назад +2

      I got a small group and we are making a niche game, I'm hoping it will pop off

    • @CodingAbroad
      @CodingAbroad 2 месяца назад +5

      @@elbarriotrucker aww thanks, well it’s called Bayou Island (it’s a point and click game). I dare not look at the reviews anymore

    • @CodingAbroad
      @CodingAbroad 2 месяца назад +2

      @@elbarriotrucker but don’t pay for it please, I’ll get you a steam key

    • @CodingAbroad
      @CodingAbroad 2 месяца назад +5

      @@Cjoudan I wish you lots of success. Only thing I can advise it try to have a thick skin when it comes to comments and reviews. Especially difficult when you’ve put your soul into a game

  • @DrBossKey
    @DrBossKey 2 месяца назад +1

    Thank you for the content, I alway enjoy taking a break from indie game dev to enjoy your videos!

  • @Z8MB1ET0WN
    @Z8MB1ET0WN 2 месяца назад +1

    Something really cool about this video is the fact that the advice you are giving to game developers is also the exact same method you are using on this video: hitting the right demographic, providing value, and encouraging engagement. You made me want to watch the video, so if there was any evidence of this method working, we can literally use your video as that evidence. Well done!

  • @CrackyCreates
    @CrackyCreates 2 месяца назад +3

    " like I'm doing right now "
    >looks in description
    he fucking got me.

  • @TESkyrimizer
    @TESkyrimizer 2 месяца назад +2

    How to draw an owl
    1) sketch basic shapes
    2) draw the rest of the owl
    Step 4) Market your game to the right audience encapsulates this pretty well. lmao.

  • @MightBeGiants
    @MightBeGiants 2 месяца назад

    Amazing video! #1 Changing your passion, really resonated with me. It's such a good way to look at it.

  • @MrProg-ey3tl
    @MrProg-ey3tl 2 месяца назад +1

    Great video, I'll keep all of this in mind going forward
    Question, what is the background music???

  • @motioncache
    @motioncache Месяц назад

    Just started sharing my journey on here. Thank you for sharing videos like this. They, truly help.

  • @CheeseWithMold
    @CheeseWithMold 26 дней назад

    Gonna be honest, I thought this video was just going to be another run of the mill "Heres THREE things you NEED to KNOW before making a game!!!!!!", but what a breath of fresh air. Completely grounded and sound advice to give. I'm just a hobby game dev, but this really showed me how much deeper the rabbit hole can go!

  • @mehmedcavas3069
    @mehmedcavas3069 Месяц назад +2

    as a professional game developer for over 4 years in the mobile game industry I can say that you are %100 true. you can make the best game, have the best effects, increadible visual effects animations sounds and so on. However, if no one knows your game thats your game is a failure. And not just that. Like u said in the video, players do now always want the most polished or visually stunning or unique mechanics. the target audience is really important. What you enjoy does not mean others will enjoy it too. We spend lots of money on prototypes, AB tests, ads, and other test to understand our target market. I really recommend for everyone who is a mobile, indie, web game developer or even has a indie team to watch this video a couple of times and really think about it. marketing does not start when you finish the game, it starts once you think about the idea

  • @mattgc
    @mattgc Месяц назад

    This is a gold mine of ideas, for game devs, but also just pursuits (business, sports, etc) in general.
    Great work

  • @Robonauta
    @Robonauta 2 месяца назад +1

    As someone making an indie game with full awareness it'll never be "worthy of a sale", perusing one of the forums I visit more often, it's incredible how listening to feedback seems to be the exception, rather than the rule. Devs that are way in over their heads is one of the most common problems, they have this huge, complex idea and ignore everyone telling them to dial back on promised features. This for "simple" RPG Maker games and Visual Novels, more often than not. As said, you don't have to listen to every piece of feedback, but when the majority of feedback point to the same problem, then you should definitely work on that.
    I've also helped a fellow with playtesting his current beta version of a game, his message when he sent me a copy was "I think there are only 2 bugs left" - I've found one money exploit, one possible infinite exp exploit (repeating a boss fight), several problems with the save/load system, plus a myriad of other problems. He knew I was going to be thorough, so I'm hopeful he'll work on fixing most of those things.

  • @KITT.007
    @KITT.007 2 месяца назад +3

    It’s ironic that the channel is named “Going Indie” when this vid says that 96% of Indie video games fail

  • @Fireballof3
    @Fireballof3 2 месяца назад +1

    I work at a tabletop games company and the lessons here are just as relevant in that industry - Know your audience, know your market, be passionate about refining your work process, market like a champ, don't forget about the business.
    Always good to hear the same strong lessons from another point of view.

  • @paulvecchio4088
    @paulvecchio4088 2 месяца назад +2

    I’ve had this game idea in my mind for years. Boxman, the explanation is long, but it is a surface level cute but underline cosmic horror game. I’ve been in the planning stage for 5 years and just started my dev journey.
    It may be 10 years before I get to make the game as big as I see it. Maybe it won’t blow up, but I plan to make a game no one has seen before and I’m taking it one step at a time

    • @creastalunga7199
      @creastalunga7199 25 дней назад

      Ohh, that sounds really interestingg! Il be looking forward to seeing how it will turn up!

  • @testtestjimmy
    @testtestjimmy 2 месяца назад +2

    A very business-focused approach here. I think the first few though a very relevant
    The difference between success and failure is perseverance.
    Fail fast, adapt and grow.

  • @porudoryu
    @porudoryu 2 месяца назад +1

    Reminds me of that Peanuts strip where Lucy asks Schroeder, 'What happens after 20 years of practicing piano if you still end up broke and not famous?' He replied, 'The joy is in the playing.'

  • @TeppuTeppu
    @TeppuTeppu 2 месяца назад +6

    I already made 6 personal projects before the game I am currently working on. None of them were fun. But I have lots of confidence for my current project because I have gotten some pretty good comments from people that are really interested in my game

    • @kars6026
      @kars6026 2 месяца назад

      Nice, what kind of game is it? I'd like to try it. Because i like trying games from new developer. Even i know some that made it to steam.

    • @TeppuTeppu
      @TeppuTeppu 2 месяца назад

      Sorry I can't reply to you my replies keep getting deleted, I don't know why

  • @TheNewSuperGameDevStudent
    @TheNewSuperGameDevStudent Месяц назад

    Incredible video! So much value in these advice.
    Thanks a lot for sharing!

  • @seruji_shard
    @seruji_shard 2 месяца назад

    I wasn't expecting a Way of Kings screamer, it's the 4th random video on RUclips I see where the book is mentioned HAAHAH (love your videos + stormlight too!!)

  • @49wares
    @49wares 2 месяца назад

    Great video as always. No wonder you blew off, keep that good content coming 😀👍.

  • @ninjahedgehog5
    @ninjahedgehog5 2 месяца назад

    I feel that first tip hard. I have dipped my hands in so many artistic practices. Drawing, editing, 2d model rigging. I'm always proud of what I made, but I never found a passion for the process of making it.

  • @teammartin95
    @teammartin95 2 месяца назад

    A lot of this advice can apply to me as an animator, so thank you for this!

  • @GameDesignBrain
    @GameDesignBrain Месяц назад

    Thanks for the great video. I am about to launch my game page soon. I will be thinking about your video. Might rewatch it later.

  • @derrickjohnson4952
    @derrickjohnson4952 2 месяца назад +2

    I started paying way more attention to how other games handle mechanics or situations I want to use. As a more casual RPG fan I want to make a fun open world first person RPG. So I absolutely played some Skyrim, hated the combat hated the magic. I wanted something with a punch but without going to the more chivalry side bam vermintide 2’a combat I remember always being fun & engaging. As for magic idk but I do know I want a charge spell system.

  • @JeromeMillion
    @JeromeMillion Месяц назад +1

    The Ford quote is actually really smart and used often in User Experience Design. He is not implying that he didn't talk to people and that he didn't ask the question. He is saying that had he asked that question directly and just given people what they said they wanted, he would have given faster horses (if physically possible).
    What he did instead is listen to the core of the issue, what people were really struggling with. They were looking for a solution to go faster and they had no idea outside of horses so... They asked for faster horses. A true problem solver like Ford had to break away from the "given solution" the "what people said they needed" and find the actual way to solve their problem.

  • @stellanovaluna
    @stellanovaluna 2 месяца назад +1

    I LOVE THE WAY OF KINGS I DID NOT EXPECT YOU TO KNOW OF IT THATS SO AWESOME

  • @TheOrian34
    @TheOrian34 2 месяца назад

    Really interesting discussion, and I already knew what the fourth was going to be before you said it.
    Seems to be a recurrent issue, isn't it?
    On a different note, I was thinking about another "staple" of game culture, have you considered talking about pre-ordering and the difference from kickstarting, if there is a difference. Yet seen in completely opposite light.

  • @LionDEmil
    @LionDEmil 27 дней назад

    What are the song you use in the video? would be nice to know

  • @lucascodebreak
    @lucascodebreak Месяц назад +1

    6:07 i don't expected to see this meme here haha
    also, nice video

  • @MitazasAlways
    @MitazasAlways 2 месяца назад

    Thanks for making this video! It will surely help me forming a game development/distribution company.

  • @exoZelia
    @exoZelia 2 месяца назад +1

    This is the perfect video for where I'm at on my first game. Sorry I did already write some code but I'm gonna go dig around more. Luckily my day job is content marketing so I have a decent head start on some elements of all this

  • @Jotaauvei_
    @Jotaauvei_ Месяц назад +1

    Fantastic video, I agree on every point 👏
    A few weeks ago I launched my first commercial game on Steam (EVERING) and as I watched the video I was quite satisfied. I knew beforehand the market, the target audience, sales forecast... until I got to the marketing. That's where I'm sure I should have done better. And I will do it in my future games, because my passion project is not just a game, but to work making games.
    I worked in several studios that fell into the same mistakes you mention and went bankrupt before they could release a game or even have something to show, so I don't even have a portfolio to show. I decided to use the experience I gained to show the world that it is possible. Now my goal is to make money to be able to continue 💪

  • @RAyLV17
    @RAyLV17 2 месяца назад +1

    I might be wrong since I am not dev or anything but have been interested in it for sometime.
    A question: Speaking just about Match-3 games, wouldn't it be just another game among many similar games? where's the uniqueness, then?
    Wouldn't narrowing down the niche so much make your idea lose its uniqueness?

  • @JonelKingas
    @JonelKingas 6 дней назад +1

    I noticed, if you want your game to succeed more often just make a 3d, multiplayer game.
    look at lethal company, phasmophobia, content warning...
    if these games were singleplayer and 2d with same concept it would be bad and boring...
    well tbh even 2d is good, but multiplayer boosts success rates a ton... barotrauma is one example that game is amazing

  • @Drakuba
    @Drakuba 2 месяца назад +6

    counterpoint:
    If you make something thats actually new and fresh you can ignore half of the vid
    you still need to market yourself and talk about your game tho, its strong points and what distinguishes you from all the other peasants
    if you make a game for sole purpose of selling as many copies as possible by making a copy of a game thats already a copy of different game, you need to do all that extra crap as well, because people already played the original so why should they play your watered down version?
    So dont make Match 3 Puzzle, dont make another Vampire Survivor, dont make next Jump King because theres so many copies of those games floating around your "spin" will just get lost in all the garbage, make something original, something new and different and market those differences

    • @fumetsusozo
      @fumetsusozo 2 месяца назад +1

      Exactly! There is nothing wrong with being inspired by other media one likes, but many noob indies have a problem where they are just making worse copies of other popular media with almost no unique spin on it to help itself. Many videos like this one give to much credit to merely getting as much profitable content made as possible.

    • @mysticflow467
      @mysticflow467 2 месяца назад

      but the vampire survivor copies are popping off.

    • @Drakuba
      @Drakuba 2 месяца назад +1

      and before you make "your version", it will be everywhere
      Unless you combine it with some other game/genre in a meaningfull way, you would just be a part of the Vampire Survivor Blob
      if you must make vampire survivor, combine it with Diablo2 for example, just make sure you are not cutting corners. Because 50% Diablo2 and 70% VampSurv wont make 120% game, it will make halfbake game thats missing half its features

  • @Flewda
    @Flewda 2 месяца назад

    This is definitely one of the better videos on this topic I've seen. I have been in the AAA business for nearly 20 years, and am slowly dipping my toes into indie development on the side. A lot of good information here. Would love to talk with you more at some point in the future. What's the best way to contact you?

  • @R3GARnator
    @R3GARnator 2 месяца назад +4

    Probably your best video yet.

  • @Lunarcreeper
    @Lunarcreeper 2 месяца назад +1

    i don't even know how to code but i'm still watching this.
    i had a cool idea though.
    a puzzle platformer like portal, but with a focus on deformation, reshaping, and destruction physics. it sounds like a cool idea but idk anything bout game design.

    • @sirdeeztheodorenutstheseco1507
      @sirdeeztheodorenutstheseco1507 2 месяца назад

      That sounds really similar to the original idea for portal 2 which was later scrapped because fans wanted another portal game and not this new mechanic. I think it was called F-Stop if you want to look into it.

  • @sventay2441
    @sventay2441 Месяц назад +1

    you mentioned about research, but how do you research? what do you type in google to search to get the data you needed? or is there a website that i can go to get the whole graphs of market for each genre tags?

  • @EICDarkOrbitEIC
    @EICDarkOrbitEIC 2 месяца назад +7

    You made a video about indie games and tried to promote 'tanks but no tanks' but 4 days later the it has the same amount of reviews. Marketers thinks people are stupid and they'll buy anything if it's well addvertised. But the truth is people are not strupid, and they won't by shitty product no matter how hard you try to advertise it

  • @SmugLilBugger
    @SmugLilBugger 2 месяца назад +1

    I hate the general idea that people who make things shouldn't ask others what they want or don't want.
    Unfortunately, a lot of big tech game developers like Riot Games do this all the time and it has massively hurt the trust between the players and the developers because the devs DO NOT know what the players want and refuse to listen to them because they don't like the way the criticism is directed towards them. It's extremely petty stuff, especially for big tech that claims to care about players.

  • @realkekz
    @realkekz 2 месяца назад +1

    The problem is that the market (and society but we won't get into that) is too fragmented for any game to really take off like the old days, people don't just watch a few big youtubers anymore, and word of mouth just isn't what it used to be. You have to compete with a thousand other games, many of which are going to be released on the same day as your game, and there's no guaranteeing that your game which you love and worked on (your baby, more or less) is going to be loved and cared for by other people. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, but that just doesn't cut it on the open market.

  • @WilbertBernadiTomoh
    @WilbertBernadiTomoh 2 месяца назад

    "Great idea, but bad execution." I always remember that. Thank you for this video. This is good for indie game developers who do not know about marketing, and a never-give-up mentality can influence "success" (This definition of success depends on subjects like you said).

  • @buttonsoftware496
    @buttonsoftware496 Месяц назад +1

    Choosing the right genre and adding things like multiplayer co-op can really make the difference. I have 3 games on Steam with only 1 selling over 1.5k It's a survivors-like and I keep players coming back with weekly content updates, driving sales via word of mouth (and their friends seeing them play).

  • @mrsmith5114
    @mrsmith5114 2 месяца назад

    Solid advice. Love your videos, you really give another view to look at.

  • @Ruyeex
    @Ruyeex 2 месяца назад

    Love the video hope to learn more to make my stupidly simple concept and complex game profitable.
    I'm thinking to make a manufacturing game.

  • @drilkus1312
    @drilkus1312 2 месяца назад

    Tfw this is just a ploy for me to play "Tanks But No Tanks"!
    On a serious note, thanks for the vid. Kinda what I was looking for when trying to decide what sort of game to make.

  • @RedInkTheOneAndOnly
    @RedInkTheOneAndOnly 2 месяца назад

    As an aspiring indie dev, this video was very helpful and I will definitely show this to my team! Thank you!

  • @dameanvil
    @dameanvil 2 месяца назад +4

    00:00 🎲 Only 4% of games turn a profit, making indie game development a high-risk endeavor.
    01:17 🛠 Focus on the process of creation rather than just the idea to maintain passion and motivation in indie game development.
    02:52 📊 Research your target market thoroughly to understand player demographics, preferences, and market potential.
    04:05 💼 Indie developers need to adopt an entrepreneurial mindset and wear multiple hats, including game development and marketing.
    06:07 📣 Effective marketing, targeting the right audience with valuable content, is crucial for indie game success.
    07:25 🎮 Games are a combination of art and business, requiring both creativity and strategic planning for success in the industry.

  • @GreatestPossibleGood
    @GreatestPossibleGood Месяц назад

    I am a startup CEO who mentors hundreds of other founders every year, and this video's got really great advice! Thanks for sharing.

  • @FullFledged2010
    @FullFledged2010 Месяц назад +1

    One magic word: Emersion!
    Graphics/sound, Game physics, realism, complex and deep gameplay mechanics all help greatly to immerse myself into game. I want to feel like i'm in the game. Just "fun" shallow gameplay without any depth.complexity and pretty graphics just don't do it for me.. I would chose battlefield over battlebit any day because of emerson 😑
    Thats also why I own a "fullfledged" motion sim racing rig with VR and triple monitors. Cost me a fortune but it doesn't get more immersive than that 😅
    Basically if a game gets me totally lost in all the detail,realism and possibilities I'm willing to pay for it.

  • @greatestgamer00
    @greatestgamer00 2 месяца назад

    this is helping me see im in the right direction. having fun with the creative prosses. and been told start small project so sed ok smaller project it is. spent 4 days and after went dang this is alot. took my strugles and went cool now I now how to deal with so not as daunting and proud past hrudle and now i can now use that XP in the future.

  • @chadisnotachad
    @chadisnotachad 2 месяца назад +2

    I think it's 50/50
    You should talk to people and make what people want, but I also don't think it's a bad thing to simply make what you want. The market doesn't really know what it wants mostly what it doesn't.

  • @Trupen
    @Trupen 2 месяца назад +15

    "Good game will sell itself" is the biggest lie indie developers tell themselves

    • @TeppuTeppu
      @TeppuTeppu 2 месяца назад +3

      you sure? can you show me an example where the game is seriously good but has no sales?

    • @qunas101
      @qunas101 2 месяца назад

      @@TeppuTeppu Secrets of Grindea, Superfighters Deluxe - just off the top of my head

    • @TNTITAN
      @TNTITAN 2 месяца назад +2

      @@TeppuTeppuIs it really that hard to believe in a market where 10000 games are released a year one might get missed?

    • @TeppuTeppu
      @TeppuTeppu 2 месяца назад +1

      @@qunas101 the first one got more than 4k reviews on steam, even though it is still early access, I think you can't say it got no sales

    • @Pie_Mastah
      @Pie_Mastah 2 месяца назад

      @@qunas101 those games seem to be above 2k reviews. hard to really call it 'no sales'.
      i think something like phoentopia would be a better example since i remembered it having only like 400 reviews in the first year on steam

  • @yourtime
    @yourtime Месяц назад

    you are right, you are right, you are right, it is just so difficult, especially when you are not able to even start, but filled with ideas, i know, you should love the process and not just the idea behind it.

  • @alanaragon139
    @alanaragon139 Месяц назад

    That was really inspiring, thank you!

  • @jerzyk7724
    @jerzyk7724 2 месяца назад +1

    Great example of listening to people is Techland. They always listen to their community, talk to us, get our feedback good or bad. They learn on what they did wrong and change things to what we want. For me they are Number One Developer when it comes to it.