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Game development is a complicated beast, a constant challenge to get funding and for Studio Black Flag who were building the promising looking Orphan Age it's all over. A game I covered all the way back in 2018 with their Kickstarter, when the developer was confident on it having Linux support.

Speaking in a fresh announcement on Steam the developer put it very bluntly:

Dropping the nautical jargon for clarity, the last few months we’ve been going through bankruptcy procedures in France. This started when communication broke down between us and our publisher, leading to payments not continuing. Alas, with our publisher not continuing funding and no other sources of continued funding to finalize the game, the French government has elected to shut down the studio effective immediately. (Like at the end of the work day today we cannot legally continue working.)

Going by the date, they shut as of October 2nd.

To make matters worse when going through the Kickstarter they originally stressed how they "tried to work with publishers, but we never found a compromise that respected Orphan Age's DNA". Clearly they found one, but this is where it gets messier. In the FAQ at the bottom of the announcement it seems their publishing agreement handed over all of the rights of the game noting "I’m not able to get into the specifics of our contract with our publisher, but we simply do not have ownership over Orphan Age in a way that would allow us to shop it to another publisher.".

It might not be the complete end for the game since the publisher could continue it but it's now entirely out of the hands of Studio Black Flag.

Brutal, but a reminder that there's a lot of bad publisher contracts out there, where like this you hand over all your rights just to get the money. The developer has not named the publisher involved.

It's also a reminder that a lot of Kickstarter and other crowdfunding campaigns aren't nearly enough for a developer to fund a full game. Which is why a lot of them also end up with a publisher.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly came back to check on the progress of Linux until Ubuntu appeared on the scene and it helped me to really love it. You can reach me easily by emailing GamingOnLinux directly.
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RandomizedKirbyTree47 about 23 hours ago
Quoting: Eike
Quoting: RandomizedKirbyTree47Every single campaign I backed either delivered everything they promised, or is in the process of doing so and making steady progress. A few projects I backed were delayed a few years before eventually delivering the rewards. I have never been ripped off by a Kickstarter I backed.

I can say the same for my nine backings...

Quoting: RandomizedKirbyTree47I have never backed a crowdfunder for a video game and I have no plans to do so. There are so many ways it can go badly and so many already-existing games I can play that I just don't want to take the risk.

... which are all video games supporting Linux.

That's good. Maybe my worry about video game crowdfunders isn't entirely reasonable.
Cyril about 19 hours ago
Quoting: Eike
Quoting: RandomizedKirbyTree47Every single campaign I backed either delivered everything they promised, or is in the process of doing so and making steady progress. A few projects I backed were delayed a few years before eventually delivering the rewards. I have never been ripped off by a Kickstarter I backed.

I can say the same for my nine backings...

Quoting: RandomizedKirbyTree47I have never backed a crowdfunder for a video game and I have no plans to do so. There are so many ways it can go badly and so many already-existing games I can play that I just don't want to take the risk.

... which are all video games supporting Linux.

Wow, you must be very lucky...
Eike about 5 hours ago
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Quoting: Cyril
Quoting: Eike... which are all video games supporting Linux.

Wow, you must be very lucky...

For ensuring actual Linux support, I'm only backing people that have either a running Linux demo of the game or a previous game on Linux.

The other thing special about my list is probably the genre: only point and click.

But, for reference, here we go:

Reporting steady progress
* Heir of the Dog
Several previous games, including Lucy Dreaming
* Death Corp.
Author has worked on "Justin Wack and the Big Time Hack" (that's the weakest of the references)
* Roots in the Sky - The Hand of Glory 2
First game works on Linux
* Near-Mage
Makers of Gibbous
* PRIM - a 2D adventure game about Death's daughter
Had a good demo on Linux

Delivered
* Lucy Dreaming
Previous short game on Linux & working demo
* Saint Kotar - A psychological horror adventure
Working demo. They delivered the Linux version one year after the Windows version...
* The Darkside Detective: Season 2
First game ran on Linux
* The Journey Down
No sure about this one, pledged in 2017, anymore.
tuubi about 4 hours ago
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Quoting: Eike* The Journey Down
No sure about this one, pledged in 2017, anymore.

All three chapters were released on time, and they all ran fine for me on Linux. The last chapter came out in 2019 I think.
Eike about 2 hours ago
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Quoting: tuubi
Quoting: Eike* The Journey Down
No sure about this one, pledged in 2017, anymore.

All three chapters were released on time, and they all ran fine for me on Linux. The last chapter came out in 2019 I think.

I know I played and loved them, but I cannot remember anymore why I dared to make this (my very first) pledge. Did they have chapter one out already?
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