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inXile General Discussion Thread

TT1

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Make the Codex Great Again! Grab the Codex by the pussy Insert Title Here RPG Wokedex Strap Yourselves In Codex Year of the Donut A Beautifully Desolate Campaign Pillars of Eternity 2: Deadfire Pathfinder: Kingmaker Steve gets a Kidney but I don't even get a tag. My team has the sexiest and deadliest waifus you can recruit.
https://www.coinspeaker.com/2017/09...nterplay-inxile-entertainment-advisory-board/

OPSkins Adds Call of Duty Creator and Founder of Interplay and inXile Entertainment to Advisory Board
SOURCE: OPSKINS
PLACE/DATE: MENLO PARK, CALIFORNIA - SEPTEMBER 26TH, 2017
Brian Fargo and Dave Anthony will add creative and logistical expertise to world’s largest virtual in-game marketplace.

Today, OPSkins, the world’s most popular exchange for virtual in-video game items, announced two new members to its advisory board: Dave Anthony and Brian Fargo. This announcement follows OPSkins’ creation of the Worldwide Asset eXchange (WAX), a decentralized platform for the development of secure and transparent online game virtual item exchange based on the blockchain. The appointments will help propel WAX and OPSkins, which is already the global leader in the $50 Billion ‘gaming skins’ market, having completed over 150 million transactions to date.

Dave Anthony, the original creator and developer behind Call of Duty, will bring his creative and logistical expertise to OPSkins. As the visionary behind one of the world’s most profitable video game franchises at over 250 million copies sold, Dave will guide OPSkins’ new WAX platform to facilitate the massive influx of a potential 400 million new gamers on to the blockchain.

Brian Fargo, founder of Interplay Entertainment and inXile Entertainment, will add a deep understanding of game development and distribution. Fargo’s mastery will guide WAX to become the first functional blockchain-based virtual item exchange platform, offering gamers a clever new way to enjoy and monetize their gaming experience.

“We are extraordinarily proud to have these leading experts in the realms of finance, gaming and cryptocurrency on our advisory team,” said WAX President and CIO Malcolm CasSelle. “With experience serving millions of gamers and profound knowledge of blockchain and finance, Dave, Brock and Brian will use their respective talents to help us revolutionize the gaming industry through the Worldwide Asset eXchange.”

About OPSkins

Created in 2015, OPSkins is the global marketplace leader for video game virtual assets. The company facilitates over 100 million purchases annually from millions of customers in 95 countries.

About WAX

The Worldwide Asset eXchange (WAX) is a new project helmed by the founders of OPSkins that will allow individual virtual in-game item exchanges to be created and hosted easily, securely and transparently on the blockchain. The WAX token pre-sale begins in September with a full sale beginning October 17th.

:dontbelievehislies:
 
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Iznaliu

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Brian Fargo, founder of Interplay Entertainment and inXile Entertainment, will add a deep understanding of game development and distribution

This is the funniest thing I've read for quite a while.
 
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You don't understand. This is how famous/influential people do a "part time job". They join some organization, barely participate and show only on some big PR galas. The organization can bask in their glory and look more serious/influential and they will get a fat paycheck for doing basically nothing.
This is just a glorified way of putting brand logos on famous sportsmen.
 
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You don't understand. This is how famous/influential people do a "part time job". They join some organization, barely participate and show only on some big PR galas. The organization can bask in their glory and look more serious/influential and they will get a fat paycheck for doing basically nothing.
This is just a glorified way of putting brand logos on famous sportsmen.
It's not that Fargo is so influential for a current generation though, save for financially successful riding the kickstarter wave when it was just starting.
 
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You don't understand. This is how famous/influential people do a "part time job". They join some organization, barely participate and show only on some big PR galas. The organization can bask in their glory and look more serious/influential and they will get a fat paycheck for doing basically nothing.
This is just a glorified way of putting brand logos on famous sportsmen.
It's not that Fargo is so influential for a current generation though, save for financially successful riding the kickstarter wave when it was just starting.

For the current generation they have that Call of Duty loser. They can have more than one celebrity on board, so they want to cover as many bases as they can.
Also note that Fargo is great at self promoting, so it's entirely possible that they think he is more influential than he really is :)
 

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Codex Year of the Donut Serpent in the Staglands Dead State Divinity: Original Sin Project: Eternity Torment: Tides of Numenera Wasteland 2 Shadorwun: Hong Kong Divinity: Original Sin 2 A Beautifully Desolate Campaign Pillars of Eternity 2: Deadfire Pathfinder: Kingmaker Pathfinder: Wrath I'm very into cock and ball torture I helped put crap in Monomyth
Brian Fargo interviewed about rising gamedev costs: http://www.gamesindustry.biz/articl...ame-dev-costs-put-squeeze-on-mid-tier-studios

He seems to be concerned about how Larian and Obsidian have left inXile trailing behind, budget-wise.

Rising game dev costs put squeeze on mid-tier studios
inXile's Brian Fargo, Hidden Path's Jeff Pobst and Turtle Rock's Steve Goldstein weigh in on the growing gap between gaming's haves and have-nots

Making games is expensive. Let me rephrase that: making games is really, really expensive.

Obviously, that's no secret, but the numbers involved are even surprising to those of us who follow the industry every day. Last month, Kotakureported many studios budget around $10,000 per person per month to cover salaries plus overhead. Considering that many of the more polished games on the market can take years to create, budgets can spiral out of control very easily and this has a impact on the entire ecosystem.

Moreover, that $10,000 figure is actually lower than many studios spend, industry veterans Brian Fargo (inXile Entertainment) and Jeff Pobst (Hidden Path Entertainment) tell me.

"I used $10,000 per man-month [for budgets] when I was a producer for Sierra online in 2000," Pobst notes.


Brian Fargo, inXile Entertainment

Fargo concurs: "I would say [$10,000 is] on the low side. I think Tim Schafer pointed out a couple of years ago that this is why these things cost so much to make. There's a big difference between small developers cutting their teeth that have no overhead versus a team of people who've been in the business for two decades. They have families and expect medical insurance, and so it's not going to be something that costs less than $10,000 on average for my people.

"That's on the low end by maybe 20% or 30%. I don't think we're seeing double that, but certainly it's the trajectory we're all going towards. I think that's a fair number. It's always been a funny disparity. We talk about making a game with a budget of, say, $10 million and the smaller developers tend to look at it and go, 'How do they waste so much money?' And then the triple-A guys say, 'How do they do it for so cheap?'

"That seems to be the perpetual argument on these budgets when you want to do something that is ambitious, and that's ultimately what we get rewarded for. Any title that comes out that is ambitious in some way is more likely to be rewarded than one that isn't."

Ambition is a wonderful thing, and most developers have ambitious visions for their games, but then they meet the reality of what ambition costs. The double-A space is now having to invest more than is reasonable for small or mid-sized studios.

"The industry continues to get more binary between the haves and have nots," Fargo continues. "When I see something like salaries going to as high as $20,000 per man-month in San Francisco, that really only affects the smaller to mid-size companies. The big companies - take Blizzard, for example - they can drop $70 million on a project, kill it and then start all over again. Rockstar can spend five years on a game.

"The extra salaries really don't affect them, in my opinion, as much as it does the smaller to the mid-size companies. So yeah, it definitely puts pressure on us.

"Also, what I'm seeing recently is that there was the single-A and double-A indie space that was sort of ripe for opportunity for a while - us included, and we've been doing well - but that's getting more competitive. And the budgets of the double-A products are starting to approach triple-A budgets of 10 years ago."

Citing Ninja Theory's Hellblade and Larian's Divinity: Original Sin 2 as recent examples, Fargo laments that expectations for games coming out of the double-A space are rising too rapidly.

"All of a sudden double-A developers are spending in excess of $10 million," he says. "And it's only a matter of time before this rises to $20 million. In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if there were some at those values already. So now what you've got is the triple-A people who are unaffected by the salaries and they're going to be spending hundreds of millions of dollars between production and marketing, and then you've got the double-A companies now starting to spend significant money. What that's going to do is to create an expectation from a user's perspective of what the visuals should look like.

"It creates a harder dynamic for even the smaller companies, because some product is at $39 or $44.95 that doesn't have a multi-million dollar marketing budget. It's still going to have production values that are incredible, and so what will people expect out of a smaller developer? That's the cascading effect of all these different things, and of course you layer on top of that the discoverability issue we've all got with an un-curated platform and it makes it very tricky."

While the major publishers like Activision or EA still manage to reap massive profits, other studios are certainly not getting wealthy by making games. California, where so much of the industry is based, makes the cost equation even more difficult.

"Consumers don't fully understand how truly expensive it is to put out a AAA game now," says Turtle Rock GM Steve Goldstein. "If you start looking at what it costs for someone to be employed in southern California, working in the knowledge industry, it's a lot. And the most frustrating thing actually, and it's something I complain about at the studio all the time, is that we got people here that are working their butts off, who do well, but still can't afford to buy a house in southern California. It's ridiculous. The cost of doing business in tech is so high, especially in California, [that] unless you are the biggest of the biggest, there's a real risk of being able to continue in this medium.

"For us to make a new IP that's AAA and that's a boxed product just doesn't make sense. Because the publisher's going to have to spend $50 to $100 million, which, as your math just points out, isn't making anybody rich over in development. They're going to make that investment... They'll release [that IP] during the holiday season so they can get that additional sales push, but it's going to be coming out amidst a ton of other titles and established franchises, so you have to try to get above the noise level just to get the IP known - it just doesn't pencil out."


Steve Goldstein, Turtle Rock

When you combine the continued escalation of costs with the challenge of getting above the noise upon release, it can feel like a Sisyphean task for a small or mid-sized games studio.

Fargo offers, "It feels like the budgets for the double-A products have doubled to tripled just in the last five years. Back in 2012 when Broken Age and Pillars [of Eternity] came out, I know what our budgets were then [for Wasteland 2] and I know what the budgets are going to now. I have a sense of what Larian and Obsidian are spending, and I know these numbers have gone up significantly.

"Curation has always been a hot topic. One might argue there's a greater risk of a game being lost in a sea of products, than that of a great game not making it through the quality bar to be in the store. The stats of more and more and more games hitting Steam have not been favorable for any of us... You've got kind of a one, two, three-punch against the smaller publishers/developers."

The shift to digital storefronts and the rise in the sheer number of titles flooding those digital shelves is not ideal, Pobst agrees, and it's making life hard for the really small indies out there.

"For a period of time... we could sell games that were not $60 top price games, and we could make good money... and we could get the opportunity to make more games," he says. "That opportunity is being challenged because there is such a large number of games at low prices in the marketplace. That takes the market, which gives lots of people choice and is really good for gamers in the one sense, and it splits the amount of money against a large number of people.

"I know a large number of individual indies who are closing up shop because they aren't now even making enough money to pay for their own well-being. And that used to be a pretty sure thing. If you had a three-person shop or a four-person shop, you could sell enough to actually make a living. Now that's becoming challenging with so many games available for purchase."

One way to alleviate the sting of rising costs has been to use crowdfunding sites like Kickstarter, and while that has been a boon for the mid-size studios like Double Fine or inXile, in some ways the crowdfunding phenomenon has been a double-edged sword when it comes to setting expectations on budgets, says Pobst.

"If there's a financial pressure, it's really hard for people to get together and actually make great entertainment. So this is hard; this is really hard. And the only reason I think that there is a surprise is in part because of the Kickstarter phenomenon, where people were looking to raise the last $500,000 of a $2 million game, and people thought the game was made for $500,000... Games are really expensive to make, especially the kind that the consumer really desires.

"What we saw with the crowdfunding experience, that we went through ourselves as well as many others, is that the average experience where you get a certain amount of money or you just make your minimum, becomes an expectation of what it takes to actually create product, and that's pretty much not true. You're typically investing some of your own money or another investor's money into the product and, often, people are using crowdfunding to complement that so that they can have enough to make the whole thing."

The $10,000 man-month figure, while scary, is not necessarily universally applicable. Location of your studio and cost of living certainly is a factor in how much employees get paid, and smaller indies aren't going to have the same overhead as double-A teams filled with veterans. Beyond that, there are different approaches to what kind of team to build.

Pobst explains: "If you visit a development studio there are going to be several different models. The model we [use] at Hidden Path, and I've heard places like Crystal Dynamics, is to try and favor a smaller staff with more highly compensated people... The philosophy is that, if you have people who know each other really well and work together really well, their output is going to exceed what the other model [yields].

"The other model is a few highly experienced people that you compensate very highly because they're your leadership, and then [you hire] a larger number of younger and more inexpensive people. You tend to have more of those people to do the same amount of work, and there's a lot more management overhead. That can work, and there are many companies that use that model. In fact, if you start looking at successful titles, you're going to find examples of both. There is no one right model."

While the cost per head may not compare perfectly on a project-to-project or company-to-company basis, the budgets for games continue to go up no matter what. What can the mid-size studios do to compensate for this worrying fact?

"It depends on the genre you're in, but the scope and scale of the thing is what you really need to keep an eye on," Fargo advises. "The visual and audio expectations are rising as the budgets for the double-A games has risen... I would tell developers to keep a really close eye on the scope of the product; better to have something that's very small and tight and polished than something that's overly large... and hits a lot of different things but don't quite visually hold up to the others."


Jeff Pobst, Hidden Path

The other issue to contend with is how games are transforming to games-as-a-service, which could be a positive in terms of generating more revenue or a negative because of the need to support staff year-round.

"As I look out towards the future, we are most definitely looking to incorporate aspects of that business model," Fargo notes. "The plus sides of it, of course, is that there's no piracy, and you're able to do better business in some territories where piracy is extremely high. But also it allows you to build a community and have a live-ops team and do [fewer] products, but keep people on it everyday and make it better - doing tournaments and all of those things... It's a very compelling thing to have [but] it does put pressure on a single-player experience game."

Turtle Rock's Goldstein sees the games-as-a-service model going one step further, effectively becoming Netflix-like subscriptions to access content; something big publishers like Ubisoft and EA have predicted is on the horizon. Subscription revenue could be a way to help mitigate rising costs.

"I can absolutely see something like that happening down the line," he says. "Netflix is now playing with budgets that are approaching blockbuster films, so I could see those numbers working for each of the publishers, where they have their users paying a subscription and they release a certain number of really high-end titles as well as a bunch of indie titles... I could see that in five years."

Rising costs have been putting the squeeze on mid-sized studios, but that's not to say triple-A developers and publishers are immune. As Pobst points out, "There used to be a lot more publishers than there are now." As the saying goes, the bigger they are, the harder they fall, and smaller companies have a chance to succeed by being more nimble.

"Adapting is part of the game industry," Pobst continues. "You try and find the areas to adapt to that match your skill set. If you're a great narrative designer and your team makes great narrative games, you probably don't go into mobile and focus on free-to-play monetization. It's not really playing to your strengths."

Being nimble allows a studio to try new things. VR is the perfect example of that. Both Hidden Path and Turtle Rock are taking a chance on the emerging medium in the hope that it does become a growth market, and their respective experience should set them up well for the future if VR truly goes mainstream.

And if a studio manages to create a hit, suddenly you have a built-in audience that's more likely to purchase your next title, based on studio reputation alone.

"You've got to give Bungie credit for creating Halo after several other games before that, and then creating Destiny after Halo - that's a big challenge to do," Pobst says. "And then the folks as Blizzard, they've created multiple different hits, which is fairly rare in our industry. If you can build trust with an audience and they can really buy into the anticipation of whatever you're going to do, your ability to spend more to get it right is there.

"Once you do cross over that threshold, Bungie or Blizzard, their budgets are going to be much, much larger than anything you or I have talked about. Their per head rate or the amount of money they'll put into a game is much, much higher for two reasons: one, they know that if they deliver something quality, people will buy it because of the reputation they have. And two, by spending more money, they are putting a greater distance between them and the next competitor. And that greater distance will pay off in the long run."

If a studio does manage to cross that threshold, a huge advantage is unlocked. Suddenly, you're not worried as much about the money to achieve your creative vision, Pobst says.

"If I'm really focused on the dollars...then I'm not actually focused on the best entertainment I can possibly create. If you know that the audience is going to come in a disproportionate way to what you spend, spending stops becoming the problem. A lot of these [bigger] studios are really focused on: 'How do I execute the best? How do I have my team work well? How do I know exactly which features to invest in and which features not to invest in?' You get to a whole set of problems that are far beyond the money problems."

Some have made comparisons to Hollywood and the drastic divide between indie film labels and behemoth studios like Universal, but for all the talk of haves and have nots, Fargo concedes that game creators have a chance at success for lower investments - for now, at least.

"You look at PUBG, that would be considered a smaller Hollywood film and it sells 15 million copies, but that's more profitable than most of the Hollywood blockbusters," he says. "I don't know that there's a parallel in the film business where people on a semi-regular basis are spending under $10 million on a movie yet it's producing blockbuster Hollywood profits. The games business does continue to do that - Rocket League, for example.

"There's enough cases where these smaller titles have just nailed it, but the effect of that is their next ones are going to see a huge difference in budget."
 
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vonAchdorf

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Would have been interesting to have had Sven in the interview, since they are mentioned a lot and unlike Fargo, Larian decided to go with the times and go big or bust. Larian also avoided to set up shop in California, but where you waste a lot of money, but went to subsidy heaven Quebec.
 

Infinitron

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Codex Year of the Donut Serpent in the Staglands Dead State Divinity: Original Sin Project: Eternity Torment: Tides of Numenera Wasteland 2 Shadorwun: Hong Kong Divinity: Original Sin 2 A Beautifully Desolate Campaign Pillars of Eternity 2: Deadfire Pathfinder: Kingmaker Pathfinder: Wrath I'm very into cock and ball torture I helped put crap in Monomyth
Hard to fault somebody for wanting to work where he was born and lived his entire life. He did set up another studio in New Orleans for cheaper costs.
 

vonAchdorf

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Hard to fault somebody for wanting to work where he was born and lived his entire life. He did set up another studio in New Orleans for cheaper costs.

This wasn't aimed at Fargo, but I wanted to underline that Larian's decisions seem to have been driven by a solid business sense and not vanity (unlike Schaefer's expensive San Francisco offices). Belgium then Russia, Ireland and Quebec seems deliberately smarter than Belgium, Germany, London and San Francisco for a company expansion.

Still - all the people in the interview complain about California wages and real estate prices (which is something Fargo isn't negatively affected by personally), but no one brings up the possibility of leaving California, where they have to compete with deep pocketed FANG companies and Blizzard for tech talent.
 
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Cross

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"Also, what I'm seeing recently is that there was the single-A and double-A indie space that was sort of ripe for opportunity for a while - us included, and we've been doing well - but that's getting more competitive. And the budgets of the double-A products are starting to approach triple-A budgets of 10 years ago."

Citing Ninja Theory's Hellblade and Larian's Divinity: Original Sin 2 as recent examples, Fargo laments that expectations for games coming out of the double-A space are rising too rapidly.

"All of a sudden double-A developers are spending in excess of $10 million," he says.
Didn't nuTorment go massively over budget and ended up costing around 10 million?
 

Roguey

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Fargo's sour because he spent $8.5 million on a bomb. +M

Josh Sawyer's historical RPG will definitely cost less to make than Pillars of Eternity, so I'm unconcerned for now.
 

fantadomat

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Fargo's sour because he spent $8.5 million on a bomb. +M

Josh Sawyer's historical RPG will definitely cost less to make than Pillars of Eternity, so I'm unconcerned for now.
A little bit of ignorance here. What was the 8.5 million bomb?
 

IHaveHugeNick

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Fargo has a point, PC market starts to reminiscent the late 90s PC market just before it crashed. Insanely expensive hardware that sometimes can barely run newest games, leaps in visuals driving up production costs while the crowdfunding model is losing steam.

But yeah, he also overplayed his hand. Torment bombed, and they don't have anything that exciting currently in the pipeline, because I seriously doubt BTIV will become a huge seller. That leaves them with WL3, where people will expect much better visuals than previous game, but just as big. So it's going to be pricey and might be the end for them if it's not a success.

I think they've made a mistake by launching BT4 campaign, nobody really wanted it in a first place and it got funded purely because of Kickstarter craze that was running on its last fumes.
 

fantadomat

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Fargo has a point, PC market starts to reminiscent the late 90s PC market just before it crashed. Insanely expensive hardware that sometimes can barely run newest games, leaps in visuals driving up production costs while the crowdfunding model is losing steam.

But yeah, he also overplayed his hand. Torment bombed, and they don't have anything that exciting currently in the pipeline, because I seriously doubt BTIV will become a huge seller. That leaves them with WL3, where people will expect much better visuals than previous game, but just as big. So it's going to be pricey and might be the end for them if it's not a success.

I think they've made a mistake by launching BT4 campaign, nobody really wanted it in a first place and it got funded purely because of Kickstarter craze that was running on its last fumes.
Still Obsidian managed to use kickstarter successfully,because PoEE didn't suck. While wasteland 2 and numenera are fails. Wasteland 2 was dated both visually and mechanically,while the writing was mediocre. Numenera is mishmash of ideas in blotted writing with very little fighting that was also boring.
 

Rev

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Fargo has a point, PC market starts to reminiscent the late 90s PC market just before it crashed. Insanely expensive hardware that sometimes can barely run newest games, leaps in visuals driving up production costs while the crowdfunding model is losing steam.

But yeah, he also overplayed his hand. Torment bombed, and they don't have anything that exciting currently in the pipeline, because I seriously doubt BTIV will become a huge seller. That leaves them with WL3, where people will expect much better visuals than previous game, but just as big. So it's going to be pricey and might be the end for them if it's not a success.

I think they've made a mistake by launching BT4 campaign, nobody really wanted it in a first place and it got funded purely because of Kickstarter craze that was running on its last fumes.
He's just butthurt that Obsidian and Larian managed to run successful campaigns and making good games, that allowed them to grow beyond the initial plan, while inXile has not and his last game has been a huge flop.
Larian some years ago was probably the weakest of the trio, but they managed to build something good with D:OS and since they made huge profits they invested heavily in the sequel, which has paid off since it's selling a lot more than the already very successful first game. Obsidian was successful with PoE and is now making PoE2 with more money, we'll see if it will be successful (I think it will be btw) but it already have top-notch graphics and presentation for a game like that, aka top down rpgs.
It's also a natural road for both of them (and we've seen other companies did the same in the past, like CDP with The Witchers), one that inXile would've taken too if they could and Fargo's only complaining because he can't afford to spend too much after he (and his company) fucked up big time, which is only his (their) fault.
And he was the first one to try to reach consoles, spending money on portings that no one asked for (and guess what, peasants don't give a shit about T:ToN and games like that, who would have though), making WL3 multiplatform from the start, saying that it would have double the budget of WL2 in the pitch, that graphics would be better, more XCOM-inspired and stuff, so it's quite hypocritical of him to be the one complaining now.

Edit: also, we should remember that between the big Kickstarter RPGs, T:ToN is the one that ended up with the biggest budget, with a total sum that should amount to about 8.5 million dollars. But they clearly mismanaged the budget, because the game doesn't even remotely look like it took more money than, say, Pillars of Eternity. It has less assets, less voice acting, it's shorter, there are basically no interiors, the map size is small, gameplay is more straighforward, there are less classes, less everything. Playing the game one would argue where the money went.
So, again, who's to blame if he/they cannot manage money properly even when they have it?
 
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IHaveHugeNick

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Fargo has a point, PC market starts to reminiscent the late 90s PC market just before it crashed. Insanely expensive hardware that sometimes can barely run newest games, leaps in visuals driving up production costs while the crowdfunding model is losing steam.

But yeah, he also overplayed his hand. Torment bombed, and they don't have anything that exciting currently in the pipeline, because I seriously doubt BTIV will become a huge seller. That leaves them with WL3, where people will expect much better visuals than previous game, but just as big. So it's going to be pricey and might be the end for them if it's not a success.

I think they've made a mistake by launching BT4 campaign, nobody really wanted it in a first place and it got funded purely because of Kickstarter craze that was running on its last fumes.
He's just butthurt that Obsidian and Larian managed to run successful campaigns and making good games, that allowed them to grow beyond the initial plan, while inXile has not and his last game has been a huge flop.
Larian some years ago was probably the weakest of the trio, but they managed to build something good with D:OS and since they made huge profits they invested heavily in the sequel, which has paid off since it's selling a lot more than the already very successful first game. Obsidian was successful with PoE and is now making PoE2 with more money, we'll see if it will be successful (I think it will be btw) but it already have top-notch graphics and presentation for a game like that, aka top down rpgs.
It's also a natural road for both of them (and we've seen other companies did the same in the past, like CDP with The Witchers), one that inXile would've taken too if they could and Fargo's only complaining because he can't afford to spend too much after he (and his company) fucked up big time, which is only his (their) fault.
And he was the first one to try to reach consoles, spending money on portings that no one asked for (and guess what, peasants don't give a shit about T:ToN and games like that, who would have though), making WL3 multiplatform from the start, saying that it would have double the budget of WL2 in the pitch, that graphics would be better, more XCOM-inspired and stuff, so it's quite hypocritical of him to be the one complaining now.

Edit: also, we should remember that between the big Kickstarter RPGs, T:ToN is the one that ended up with the biggest budget, with a total sum that should amount to about 8.5 million dollars. But they clearly mismanaged the budget, because the game doesn't even remotely look like it took more money than, say, Pillars of Eternity. It has less assets, less voice acting, it's shorter, there are basically no interiors, the map size is small, gameplay is more straighforward, there are less classes, less everything. Playing the game one would argue where the money went.
So, again, who's to blame if he/they cannot manage money properly even when they have it?

Wasteland 2 was enjoyable and more importantly, it made them a lot of money. Enough money to survive Torment's troubled production and subsequent flopping, and keep going. The issue right now is I seriously doubt they can afford two flops in a row, and BT4 was a lousy bet from the start. The 90s style RPGs have found a new audience, but 80s style RPG might not. It's a completely unfamiliar style of game to most people out there, even those who are normally interested in playing hardcore RPGs. Remember how limp the Kickstarter campaign was, and how they struggled to even explain what kind of game is this going to be? If they can't explain it to their own fanbase, how are random buyers going to understand?

Larian and Obsidian had bigger success, but it's worth noting that they played it very safe, after the first successful game they just went back and make a straight-up sequel, reusing a lot of systems, assets, engines, and what have you. Fargo gambled hard with Torment and now they're in trouble.
 

Iznaliu

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Still - all the people in the interview complain about California wages and real estate prices (which is something Fargo isn't negatively affected by personally), but no one brings up the possibility of leaving California, where they have to compete with deep pocketed FANG companies and Blizzard for tech talent.

Relocation costs money that InXile might not be able to afford without making its already precarious financial situation worse.
 

vonAchdorf

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Messages
13,465
Still - all the people in the interview complain about California wages and real estate prices (which is something Fargo isn't negatively affected by personally), but no one brings up the possibility of leaving California, where they have to compete with deep pocketed FANG companies and Blizzard for tech talent.

Relocation costs money that InXile might not be able to afford without making its already precarious financial situation worse.

InXile won't relocate with their main office, at least not as long as Fargo's retired. It wouldn't pay off for him and probably the studio in the short run, them - so I understand why they don't do it.
 

Rev

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1,180
Larian and Obsidian had bigger success, but it's worth noting that they played it very safe, after the first successful game they just went back and make a straight-up sequel, reusing a lot of systems, assets, engines, and what have you. Fargo gambled hard with Torment and now they're in trouble.
I don't agree with this.
Larian betted its future on D:OS, and it did in a time when people would laugh at the mere idea of a turn-based RPG being a top-seller. Beyond that, it wasn't a sequel or a spiritual successor to an old game, but something different, with some "old-school" elements but also new ones.
In the end it paid off for them, but it could've really gone a different way and made them close down.

Obsidian certainly played it safe with PoE, on that I agree, but inXile kind of played it safe too: they only made sequels and a spiritual successor to a very loved game, and for all of them they went to crowdfunding unlike other devs who chose to limit their number of KS/Fig campaigns. Now, T:ToN flopped really hard, but I think that's more inXile's fault than being a very risky project that no players wanted, in fact I think a Torment-like game made by Obsidian would've been much more successful (probably not as much as PoE but I think it would've sold at least 500k copies), simply because they're more famous and because people trust them more, especially after all the Fargo lies and random bullshit inXile pulled in the last years.
The only risky project they pitched is Bard's Tale, because the market for that is quite small and the only reason why it's been done is because Fargo likes the franchise (and it's probably his first game too).
 

Infinitron

I post news
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Codex Year of the Donut Serpent in the Staglands Dead State Divinity: Original Sin Project: Eternity Torment: Tides of Numenera Wasteland 2 Shadorwun: Hong Kong Divinity: Original Sin 2 A Beautifully Desolate Campaign Pillars of Eternity 2: Deadfire Pathfinder: Kingmaker Pathfinder: Wrath I'm very into cock and ball torture I helped put crap in Monomyth
I don't agree with this.
Larian betted its future on D:OS, and it did in a time when people would laugh at the mere idea of a turn-based RPG being a top-seller. Beyond that, it wasn't a sequel or a spiritual successor to an old game, but something different, with some "old-school" elements but also new ones.
In the end it paid off for them, but it could've really gone a different way and made them close down.

IHaveHugeNick said:
it's worth noting that they played it very safe, after the first successful game
 

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