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Kyle Pittman From Minor Key Games who created Super Win The Game has done a blog post on Gamasutra about their games, and it shows more poor reception from Linux gamers.

QuoteI’ve sold about fifty copies on Linux, which is a drop in the bucket next to what it cost me financially and emotionally to support that platform.


They also only sold 694 in the first week on Steam, and that's very low. It seems the main problem has been press, and the lack of it for SWtG. Press is very important of course, but not always the deciding factor.

SWtG was quite unique too, as it used some interested visual effects to make the game really feel like it was from a different time. Of course there lies the problem, a retro-styled game like SWtG is hitting a very niche market, so it wasn't exactly positioned to sell millions.

I was a gamer back in the days of the Amiga, and I loved it back then, but it doesn't mean I want to go back to those games with their awkward controls and funny looking screens. Not to say SWtG is awkward, but it's very much like all those games I played before my teens.
The game is interesting for the use of screen-effects, but when you get down to it, the graphics and gameplay are very simplistic.

It might be right up your street though, it just isn't my cup.

See the full post here.

I hope the developer manages to do better with their next game. If you wish, you can check out Super Win the Game on Steam or buy it directly with the humble widget.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5GSMutcLaiU Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: Editorial
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knet Nov 16, 2014
well, another retro platformer, indie game market is just over-saturated, i feel we will hear alot of such in future. furthermore if you buy a game on steam you cant choose for which platform you are buying it, so whats the point of that argument anyway.
Crash Nov 17, 2014
There are indie games we must play, and indie games that fade into obscurity. I wouldn't buy this game. Even if it were free I probably wouldn't complete it, let alone play it. It's just too dated. I know it's intentional but I'm still very uninterested.

These aspiring developers need to understand that game development is very stressful, time consuming, and hardly rewarding the first time around. It's not an 80's montage that ends with the success of Hotline Miami. Even most small studios barely break even on their first few titles. I hate to say this, but a Mac/Linux port prior to success was a bad idea.
kevie Nov 17, 2014
I think that the big problem here, as has been mentioned by several posters already, is not that Linux game sales are low, rather that this game's sales are low. The fact of the matter is that there are loads of retro games already available on Linux, it is already a niche market and then your talking about a game that has a niche market within a niche market. Sales are always going to be low, regardless of the system that it is ported too.

This also shows that Linux gamers are becoming a bit more frugal with their money, back in the days before the Humble Bundles etc most Linux gamers (myself included) would buy a game simply because it had been ported to Linux, regardless of the quality (I think I own the majority of the LGP boxed games.) But now you have to stand out in a marketplace that isn't crowded, but there are certainly more traders selling their wares than there were previously. I'm into retro gaming personally, I saw this title when it was released, but it didn't appeal to me. It is simply that the game has a limited market and a sign of the times: Linux gamers are now becoming more discerning in their purchases.
dubigrasu Nov 17, 2014
Quoting: kevieThis also shows that Linux gamers are becoming a bit more frugal with their money, back in the days before the Humble Bundles etc most Linux gamers (myself included) would buy a game simply because it had been ported to Linux, regardless of the quality (I think I own the majority of the LGP boxed games.) But now you have to stand out in a marketplace that isn't crowded, but there are certainly more traders selling their wares than there were previously. I'm into retro gaming personally, I saw this title when it was released, but it didn't appeal to me. It is simply that the game has a limited market and a sign of the times: Linux gamers are now becoming more discerning in their purchases.

Indeed, I was more willing to throw money for Linux games just as a sign of appreciation sometimes. I bought games that I never played or tried (and I knew that before buying them).
We were indeed more generous (and still are) but it was a sign of these exciting new times for us after years of "starvation".
But now I have options, lots of them, and I have to pick carefully since I don't have a money tree in my backyard.
(I don't even have a backyard)
ElectricPrism Nov 17, 2014
I played that game, it sucked. Low sales? Maybe theres a legit reason.
oldrocker99 Nov 18, 2014
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I certainly like to support Linux game developers, and have bought (some time ago) some games just because they had come out for Linux, not because the kind of game it was appealed to me.

These days, with 284 Steam games and God knows how many Desura games as well, I have become more...picky about what I buy. When I started noticing that I was having to visit the store page for games in my library to remember what they were, it slowly dawned on me that I had too many Linux games.

6 years ago, I wouldn't have believed that something like this could ever exist. The only commercial game I had was Neverwinter Nights (which I still play), and I had little reason to believe that much more than that would ever be available. I even dual-booted for a while, but not any more. Windows shall never darken my desktop again!
Cyba.Cowboy Nov 18, 2014
Yeah, I'm the same as many of you guys - a year or two ago, I bought pretty much every game for Linux-based operating systems... But these days, now that the number of games for Linux-based operating systems is starting to get quite large, I'm quite picky.

Generally-speaking, I won't buy just any game for Linux-based operating systems these days... Though there are exceptions - such as when a major game studio releases a so-called "AAA" title, then I will usually purchase the game "just because it's for Linux-based operating systems" and I want to show the developer that we want games too.

I'm not going to lie - I'm not a big fan of "indie" titles and don't buy a whole lot of them... But I always check them out because one thing I do know, is that some "indie" titles are absolute gems!
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