So today we say farewell to the first two titles on the list, the two titles in the SOE lineup aimed at kids. It’s just getting prohibitively expensive in terms of time to maintain these games.
The real problem is maintaining the code bases when we update our authentication or security updates. Smed said, it wasn’t a cost issue… and then turned around and said that it was, in fact, a cost issue: While some at SOE have, in the past, expressed a desire that MMOs should never die, the financials and resource constraints companies face do not always support those ideals.
I don’t know where it may end up.Īll I could recommend is that they get themselves a copy of It’s a Long Way to the Top by AC/DC… I am partial to the Jack Black version at the end of School of Rock… and to play that loudly every time life comes around to kick them in the teeth as they try to move this project forward. And I only decided to do a post because… seven dollars?ĭo you tell them to give up, go home, get a real job? I only looked at it because it was flagged to indicate it was sent from the feedback form on the About page here at TAGN, which meant somebody came here and pasted it in themselves rather than just using an email spam service. So what do you tell somebody who sends you a note asking you to please do a post about their Kickstarter campaign? Being one of a dozen or so messages in the blog inbox, I nearly passed over it. (Which, depressingly, brought in more than Eric Heimburg’s first Kickstarter.) Another MMO? Who needs that? We’re looking for the next potato salad campaign. In that context, what chance does a team with no standing and no game development experience listed have showing up with no fanfare and looking to build momentum and get the ball rolling after they have already started the clock on their campaign? It isn’t like they are making something that will capture media attention or is likely to go viral.
But Eric Heimburg at least has standing in the MMO game developer community and has worked on actual MMOs that have shipped, are still running, and could be considered successful… not to mention actually having a working alpha version of his game that you can download and try before you decided whether or not to kick in any money.Īnd with all of that, he only rolled out of the gates on the first day with $4,500 of the $100,000 he is looking to raise to hurry up the production of his game… a game that is already a tangible thing you can play. No major media outlet is clamoring for an interview with Eric Heimburg just so he can promote his new Kickstarter. Just last Friday I was bemoaning the fact that the Project: Gorgon Kickstarter campaign seemed unlikely to succeed largely, I felt, because it had little name recognition. I am not bringing this up to be hurtful or to have a joke purely at their expense… though that will probably get them some attention, which they desperately need… but because this sort of thing almost makes me weep for the almost boundless sense of optimism that this sort of project requires and how it is going to get smacked down by the harsh reality of the world of game development in general, and MMO development in particular.
While the characters in the logo made me think of the now shut down Free Realms, they could as easily be referring to the dearly departed Toontown Online. We followed many stories of kids that were heartbroken and the big void the closure of this game created. Wonky Seasons started because it’s creators saw how the closure of a popular family MMO game affected it’s players. This is all they really say on the subject:
Heck, I couldn’t tell you for sure if Free Realms was their inspiration. Okay, I am being snarky or sarcastic… or maybe both.