Norfleet
Moderator
- Joined
- Jun 3, 2005
- Messages
- 12,250
Precisely. So at first, you're just doing work, you and maybe your two or three friends. At some point your work expands beyond the scope of what you or your founding partners can handle. Money becomes involved. Employees must be hired, debts incurred. A proprietorship or partnership no longer provides sufficient legal protection. Now you need a corporation. You consult a lawyer and start the process. This quite easily explains the gap between when they declared themselves to exist and when your paperwork indicates they incorporated themselves. It's very unlikely that a bunch of indie developers, perhaps ONE indie developer, immediately set out to create a corporation without having DONE anything. Getting legal advice and filing things costs time and money, and generally falls outside the area of what developers do.If they were operating the same as before they founded, sure. But normally it's not operating in that manner. Because operating a business and dealing with everything that comes with that, it s TON different than doing your work.
Now, as people here know, I'm a pretty paranoid guy, but I don't see anything particularly deceptive or unusual about a year's gap between their declared founding date and the time their paperwork was filed. You should also note that while their paperwork was filed in 2010, their domain didn't actually exist until 2013, so it took them another 3 years AFTER filing legal paperwork to decide they warranted an online presence. Again, nothing unusual. If anything, given that they were a corporation before they bothered to appear online, should be seen as a somewhat safer thing, because it means they were organized and structured before actually appearing on the scene.