Good news today folks, as Mimimi Productions who recently released Shadow Tactics [Official Site] have stated that their previous game The Last Tinker [Official Site] was profitable on Linux (and Mac).
It's really good to see when things work out for developers, especially when they recently released another game for us which is really quite good.
On reddit, the developer did an "Ask me anything" and they had this question put to them:
Q: "Why did you release MAC and Linux ports? Are they profitable?"
Hopefully it's a similar story for their new game, which I will have a review up on sometime soon once I have been able to put more time into it as the publisher sent me a key.
It's really good to see when things work out for developers, especially when they recently released another game for us which is really quite good.
On reddit, the developer did an "Ask me anything" and they had this question put to them:
Q: "Why did you release MAC and Linux ports? Are they profitable?"
Mimimi ProductionsWell, in this case: because we wanted to :) To be honest, it's still a lot of work (creating ONE build per platform can take up to 15 hours!) and even with Unity there are many platform-specific bugs. We will closely look at the numbers, but for Tinker those platforms actually have been profitable, yes.
Hopefully it's a similar story for their new game, which I will have a review up on sometime soon once I have been able to put more time into it as the publisher sent me a key.
Some you may have missed, popular articles from the last month:
Correct me if I'm wrong, but as far as I know only Steam Sales played on Linux will be count as a Linux Sale. At least by Steam. I had the same question when I was considering buying boxed versions of games. For sure, this system sucks.
0 Likes
Well I buy most of the games on steam, because Valve deserves their share, too - for helping Linux gaming to get where it is now. But sometimes the game has a nice physical edition and it's always nice to have a tangible map, artbook or other collectibles, so it would suck if that automatically counted as a "Windows purchase" just because it's not tracked.
0 Likes
I bought this one quite some time ago, it does look very nice. Unfortunately, I couldn't bring myself to play it for more than few minutes. For some reasons, it gave me motion sickness every time I've tried. I've alternated between different monitors and tv screen, but nothing helped to mitigate the nausea :( I don't blame developers though as this is a very subjective feeling. Also, this game might not be for everyone, my plan was to play through it with my kids.
0 Likes
Quoting: cRaZy-bisCuiTCorrect me if I'm wrong, but as far as I know only Steam Sales played on Linux will be count as a Linux Sale. At least by Steam. I had the same question when I was considering buying boxed versions of games. For sure, this system sucks.
Steam stats can accurately show the devs how many people buy and (separately) play the game on Linux, but that's beside the point. What you wrote (only Steam Sales played on Linux will be count as a Linux Sale) matters when Win and Linux versions have different publishers - then the stats are used to determine which company will get the money from a given sale. That's nort the case here either. Shadow Tactics have a single publisher, and also the same publisher for digital and physical copies - so the money will always find their way home. I was just wondering if and how they count physical / out of steam purchases as far as Linux stats go - I just want to make sure we're properly represented in the coloured tables they will analyse when deciding on future releases. ;-)
Last edited by pb on 13 December 2016 at 5:15 pm UTC
0 Likes
I bought it, too, and I'm happy that it helped earn a profit.
0 Likes
Quoting: pbBut I have a question. I will probably buy Shadow Tactics from a retail store, as it comes with some collectibles. Since it's an in-house multi-platform release, the money will go the right way, but will they know to count it as a Linux purchase? How does it "work" when companies release multi-platform - do they count "Linux sales" (as reported by stores) or "Linux players" (on Steam) / "Linux downloads" (on GOG) to know the numbers?
When companies release mutliplatform, there is no relevance for "Linux sales", since sale goes on all versions at once. They can count Linux downloads however, assuming you are downloading the version that you intend to use. But if you buy a retail version, I suppose it's either for specific OS, and you bought that OS disk, or if it's for all platforms on that disk - they won't have any way of knowing what OS you bought it for.
Last edited by Shmerl on 13 December 2016 at 5:29 pm UTC
1 Likes, Who?
I bought it for my daughter and actually found it was really great.
0 Likes
If I were a game developer, and the physical sales were an undifferentiated shmoo, and I were trying to figure out how much money I made from Linux sales, I would get the percentage of Linux sales on Steam, assume that the percentage for physical sales was roughly the same, and count the cash as if that assumption was correct. Same-same for any other sales method I didn't have platform breakdown data for.
0 Likes
Quoting: EikeWhat are you talking about?
https://www.gog.com/game/the_last_tinker_city_of_colors
Honestly, did you even look at that link? Needless to say I visited their official homepage. There is only Steam(tm) widget.
I'm afraid I'm right on this. Better luck next time, friend!
0 Likes
Quoting: Alm888Another Steam-exclusive game... Pass.Keep passing until you realize that hipsters who play on GOG will still starving of games on five years, lol.
0 Likes
See more from me