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DoctorTristan posted:Yes, but doing it like this also creates its own special hype. They wouldn't have got anywhere near that volume of orders if they'd simply launched he product on the Oatmeal store page. For me this is the disingenuous part of it. Kickstarter is supposed to kickstart projects (duh) and it's not like the Oatmeal guy couldn't afford to print the first batch, sell it in two days and print more. Ultimately, his project diverted money from lesser projects that actually needed funds.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 12:51 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 16:30 |
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Paladinus posted:Ultimately, his project diverted money from lesser projects that actually needed funds. Or from completely unrelated purchases which didn't need funds. The $20 or whatever someone spent on exploding kittens might just have easily have been used on team fortress 2 cash shop items or mountain dew or furry dog dick commissions as on some worthy art project or struggling indy game. I've no interest in the dumb card game, I haven't pledged and I don't know anything about the Oatmeal, but it's a silly blanket claim unless you have data to back it up, you could just as easily argue that it drove traffic to the kickstarter website from people who wouldn't usually go there and a portion of those people stayed to browse and backed MORE projects. Without some hard numbers and proper statistics, you can make a case for either scenario and everything in between.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 12:59 |
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They'll probably do a breakdown post on this when the numbers are in, but the kickstarter blog did a post on the potato salad stats a few months ago. Here. The main take away is nearly 3/4 of the backers had already backed other projects. quote:Most of the project's backers were not new to Kickstarter: 72% were repeat backers. In fact, even when you include the newcomers, potato salad backers have backed an average of 15 projects on Kickstarter! So while this was a global joke on the Internet, backing the project became an inside joke among core Kickstarter fans. It's a similar story with people who backed the coolest cooler, that wasn't the only thing people backed. So basically people who back the larger campaigns have backed and will back other projects. Mercury Hat has a new favorite as of 13:58 on Feb 20, 2015 |
# ? Feb 20, 2015 13:55 |
Shadoer posted:My god, I need to find something to make a kickstarter about like asap. Exploding Kittens made so much money because of the existing popularity of the Oatmeal, not because of anything to do with the concept. A hundred nearly identical concepts come and go every day, and they fail because they lack the backing of a comic that gets over 4 million unique visitors a month with an annual revenue of $500,000 as of 2012. If you were to have made the exact same concept yourself, you'd have gotten five bucks. quote:Ultimately, his project diverted money from lesser projects that actually needed funds. Crowdfunding is not a zero sum game. Even if it was, Exploding Kittens would have been diverting money from a bunch of completely useless products, lovely amateur game projects that will never go anywhere even if they get their funding, and outright scams. It seems like the anger being given toward Exploding Kittens has less to do with its merits as a game and more out of a bunch of jealous goons who wish that they had been clever enough to live off of the popularity of their dirty humor comic. chitoryu12 has a new favorite as of 14:32 on Feb 20, 2015 |
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 14:29 |
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chitoryu12 posted:Crowdfunding is not a zero sum game. Even if it was, Exploding Kittens would have been diverting money from a bunch of completely useless products, lovely amateur game projects that will never go anywhere even if they get their funding, and outright scams. The criticism stems from the fact that it's a lovely game with zero strategy to it, the art is atrocious, and the humour is of a stale monkey cheese variety. Everything else is only the reason it received so much money. Have this game been submitted by some rando, I'm sure it would have been criticised just as much, if not more. And yes, I suppose I'll have to retract my comment about diverting money from other projects, as all kickstarter projects are equally bad or worse. However, I still stand by my broader sentiment that kickstarting a project that doesn't need a kickstart is not right.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 14:47 |
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Paladinus posted:For me this is the disingenuous part of it. Kickstarter is supposed to kickstart projects (duh) and it's not like the Oatmeal guy couldn't afford to print the first batch, sell it in two days and print more. Ultimately, his project diverted money from lesser projects that actually needed funds. There are very, very few important Kickstarters. Those "lesser projects" not getting funding is not tragedy
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 14:55 |
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chitoryu12 posted:It seems like the anger being given toward Exploding Kittens has less to do with its merits as a game and more out of a bunch of jealous goons who wish that they had been clever enough to live off of the popularity of their dirty humor comic. The anger is from jealous people yes. The criticisms are because the KS itself says the prototype of the game sucked. I doubt adding more funny pics to a lovely game will change anything. I have no problem with people buying a set of Oatmeal illustrations. But if they claim the game looks fun, they are simply trying to rationalize their purchase. The fact is the game will never be fun since the prototype was already boring.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 14:57 |
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chitoryu12 posted:Crowdfunding is not a zero sum game. Even if it was... Frankly, kickstarter says that once someone backs something on kickstarter, they often come back to back something else later, because they already have account/payment set up and then it's a one click thing. I'm fairly sure a hefty chunk of the 200k kitten backers are new accounts.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 15:01 |
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Paladinus posted:And yes, I suppose I'll have to retract my comment about diverting money from other projects, as all kickstarter projects are equally bad or worse. Actually, it's about ethic in board game kickstarting
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 15:25 |
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Paladinus posted:Ultimately, his project diverted money from lesser projects that actually needed funds.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 15:28 |
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TetsuoTW posted:No it didn't. The people who backed that weren't like "ooh, should I give my $20 Kickstarter budget to this card game or a library in Africa," they just saw a dumb thing they liked and paid money for it. I was thinking more like 'should I give $20 bucks to this super popular dumb card game kickstarter that doesn't need money to produce the game, or to this different dumb card game kickstarter that actually needs money'. But then I realised that 'this different dumb card game kickstarter' is probably about anime nazis and admitted my mistake. Truga posted:Frankly, kickstarter says that once someone backs something on kickstarter, they often come back to back something else later, because they already have account/payment set up and then it's a one click thing. I'm fairly sure a hefty chunk of the 200k kitten backers are new accounts.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 15:40 |
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Paladinus posted:People who created accounts specifically to buy Exploding Kittens will most likely never donate money to a worthwile project. (reading rainbow was pretty cool)
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 15:50 |
Paladinus posted:People who created accounts specifically to buy Exploding Kittens will most likely never donate money to a worthwile project. Prove it.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 15:55 |
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Also aren't a bunch of them just $1 people being drawn in by the other clowns, trying to get the backer "achievements"?
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 18:45 |
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Cheez posted:Also aren't a bunch of them just $1 people being drawn in by the other clowns, trying to get the backer "achievements"? All but 738 backers [out of 219,382] pledged at least $20.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 19:20 |
I'm not sure I get the point of this one. Literally everything they show in the "what can I do with this" is stuff that can be done using a regular Raspberry Pi, not even needing the compute module development kit version. I think they don't understand the use case for the development kit. Integrated bluetooth and IR, no ethernet capability, just use up one of the two usb ports on the thing for wifi, and the other for your wireless keyboard. None of the GPIO pins that any of the Pi family setups have for learning electronics or developing electronic devices. $85 for the basic starter kit - their board, the actual compute module, and a wifi dongle. You could just spend $35 on the Pi 2 model b, and you'll come out with more usb ports and the GPIO pins to mess around with, the ports for the Raspberry Pi camera and touch screen, if those are things you want to use, microSD so you could have more than just the 4 GB embedded storage on the compute module for space, if you /really/ have to have wifi and bluetooth, you can get 2 usb dongles and still have two more usb ports. If I'm mistaken, please tell me about the use case where an OpenPi is any more useful than just getting a Pi 2.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 19:51 |
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taiyoko posted:I'm not sure I get the point of this one. Literally everything they show in the "what can I do with this" is stuff that can be done using a regular Raspberry Pi, not even needing the compute module development kit version. I guess the main thing is just that it's tiny, I don't know. I guess it's got all the inputs if you really need that on one board?
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 21:01 |
For anyone who thought I didn't come through for you guys. I don't even know where to start with this dude, but let's just say he didn't stop there.quote:I decided to try Patreon because I have a really hard time finding a job that I enjoy. At November last year, while working as a warehouse operative, I decided to make one of my childhood dreams - creating music - come true. Since then, every day after work I've been learning composing music from scratch. It was hard work, especially since I didn't have any teacher, but it also gave me a lot of joy. A year later I finished my first EP (Extended Play) album and published it for free on 18.10.2014. I really hope that you will enjoy it. I do not follow any specific genre as I compose, just like when I draw (I've got B.A in Arts). First I do a draft and then I start adding details that work with it. quote:New VSTi No, I'm afraid he didn't stop there either. He's so convinced he's the hottest new kid in town he even started a goddamn forum about himself. So what's all the fuss about? A rank amateur plonking away in FL studio with harmor presets and making unfitting "classical" covers of videogame music. edit: Dear god and he wants you to spend at least 4 dollars on basically unmixed albums that use motherfucking FL Slayer. Noyemi K has a new favorite as of 21:18 on Feb 20, 2015 |
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 21:09 |
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Noyemi K posted:Dear god and he wants you to spend at least 4 dollars on basically unmixed albums that use motherfucking FL Slayer. It's funny, I tried making music that didn't suck rear end in FL using Slayer, until I found out it was virtually impossible and anything you did with a real guitar would be 1000x better, even if you're poo poo at guitar. edit: for anyone else who doesn't want to trawl through the poo poo, the song that uses the awesome 'guitar' is Beheil Workshop.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 21:26 |
It wouldn't be quite as bad if he didn't use the same presets every other song but that's exactly what he's doing. He loads up harmless and turns on the chorus and reverb without even changing waveforms or anything, and will make an entire song with that one instrument. Maybe drumaxx tossed in for some flavour. I listened to the whole album and I'm on the first now and my ears are getting extremely fatigued.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 21:40 |
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When I was 16 I used to make lovely symphonic 'arrangements' of heavy metal ballads. Changed time signatures and tempo here and there, substituted guitars with violins, bass with contrabass, vocals with brass section, maaaaybe added some string section parts that copied the original melody with minor alterations and put free vsts on top of that. I then uploaded that stuff to one of countless heavy metal forums and other teenagers praised me for it. I don't think they would have given me any money, though.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 21:41 |
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The secret isn't to sell them your music, the secret is to turn your music & entire life into an elaborate pantomime where you're not just a dude who makes music but a vibrating energy portal to a world where all everyone does is smoke blunts in a DeLorean while cruising down an infinitely long beach highway during a neon sunset. You can't just be a musician anymore, you've got to be a brand ecosystem.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 21:59 |
This guy is so offensively bad and amateurish I can practically identify these presets he uses by name. In Null, Open The Door uses loving "Industrial ToTC" from Toxic Biohazard, basically the Papyrus of audio almost.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 22:03 |
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Noyemi K posted:Dear god and he wants you to spend at least 4 dollars on basically unmixed albums that use motherfucking FL Slayer. I played around with Fruityloops when I was a teen and what I made was complete crap, and even I had like ten times as many layers and voices as this guy has going on. COMEON. Its so And he wants money.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 22:03 |
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Xandu posted:http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/wp/2015/02/17/millennials-for-jeb-tries-to-catch-up-with-ready-for-hillary/ I wonder if this kid's thick enough enough to think that this will get him enough limelight so that Jeb actually hires him as a staffer or gifts him some cushy job if he were to somehow get elected.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 22:05 |
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It's definitely the "3 Stooges Syndrome" of neocon greed & fuckery, that's for certain. Doc even LOOKS like Jeb.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 22:10 |
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This is probably one of the most hilarious SA threads
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 22:18 |
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Noyemi K posted:For anyone who thought I didn't come through for you guys. I don't even know where to start with this dude, but let's just say he didn't stop there. Gorillas in my Closet is almost entirely, if not just entirely, a drum track copied and pasted into a melodic channel. Wowsers.
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# ? Feb 20, 2015 23:58 |
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Noyemi K posted:
I've heard some awful midi rips before, but man these are bad
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# ? Feb 21, 2015 00:24 |
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Did anyone notice he has a patreon set up? He's self-thaught!
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# ? Feb 21, 2015 01:43 |
There's a post where he explains he has 100 WIPs at any given time and rotates between all of them so he can be "efficient" or something and get the work done faster or whatever. I think what he actually does is place random notes until the song is long enough in his mind, and then hits that "export" button. Oh, and in case you thought it couldn't get any worse, his albums do that annoying poo poo where if you stream a song X number of times, it'll beg you to buy it every time thereafter.
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# ? Feb 21, 2015 05:23 |
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chitoryu12 posted:Exploding Kittens made so much money because of the existing popularity of the Oatmeal, not because of anything to do with the concept. A hundred nearly identical concepts come and go every day, and they fail because they lack the backing of a comic that gets over 4 million unique visitors a month with an annual revenue of $500,000 as of 2012. If you were to have made the exact same concept yourself, you'd have gotten five bucks. This is it. Massively successful kickstarters all build upon existing brands and fan bases. It is a way to activate a fan base into customers and advocates, and no "kick starter isn't meant for this" sentiment is ever going to change the fact that Kick starter always yields better returns for established brands and personas. Its good to see a sudden success crop up, but usually they've been doing the hard yards building up a small fan base too, its just that you hadn't heard of them. Exploding Kittens is just a combination of a massive initial fan base, a super safe product (really there's no risk at all that people won't get what they ordered in the end of the day), and a well concerted effort to keep rolling the marketing during the funding window. There is really nothing stopping smaller projects replicating this at a smaller scale if they generate the fan base to support it, but of course that's no easy task unless you have existing products out there.
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# ? Feb 21, 2015 08:03 |
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Has the Ullillillia thread come back yet? If not, this should probably go here.
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# ? Feb 21, 2015 09:27 |
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Noyemi K posted:There's a post where he explains he has 100 WIPs at any given time and rotates between all of them so he can be "efficient" or something and get the work done faster or whatever. I already miss MASTER PISCES! OCEAN FISH! HERE WE GO!
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# ? Feb 21, 2015 12:33 |
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Noyemi K posted:A rank amateur plonking away in FL studio with harmor presets and making unfitting "classical" covers of videogame music. Jesus Christ I was just listening to Brent Kennedy stuff and St. Anne: Piano Version gave my ears whiplash.
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# ? Feb 21, 2015 14:14 |
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dijon du jour posted:Jesus Christ I was just listening to Brent Kennedy stuff and St. Anne: Piano Version gave my ears whiplash. Probably because Brent Kennedy has actual talent and understands how to tailor the arrangement to the strengths of the instrument he's using.
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# ? Feb 21, 2015 16:30 |
The problem with the St Anne piano version besides it just being a boring note-for-note copy of the original arrangement is the lack of any kind of humanization; it's quantized as gently caress with no chords and every keyon has the same velocity, so there's no dynamics at all. It's like he's never touched a piano in his life and has not even a remote idea of how it works. Same goes for his "classical" covers. Btw the reason they're all orchestral covers is probably because he took the MIDI off VGMusic or whatever the site is called and assigned all the MIDI channels to some slightly different instruments or used a different soundfont. And he doesn't really have the sonic creativity to use a synth for that purpose, so... yeah.
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# ? Feb 21, 2015 16:41 |
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Why are people willing to give so much money for dorky watches
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# ? Feb 25, 2015 06:31 |
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Ron Paul Atreides posted:Why are people willing to give so much money for dorky watches Actually, I wonder if they've finally managed to ship the first watches to Germany yet. fe: Hahahahaha gently caress me there are still people saying they haven't received their Pebble from the original Kickstarter from 2012.
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# ? Feb 25, 2015 06:42 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 16:30 |
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TetsuoTW posted:As someone who fell for the Pebble the first time, I find it hilarious that people are still dumb enough to give them money for another watch after their first one shipped almost a year late without half of the features they showed in the pitch video. If I remember right the OUYA kickstarter still hasn't shipped out to all of the original backers either.
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# ? Feb 25, 2015 06:45 |