There are a lot of variables true. How was it people trusted a no-name company like Patreon. I had never heard of it tell 6 months ago. As for the non-money and site-building issues I have pretty much researched all of it.
They're been around for a lot longer than that (2013 or 14), if you're a developer wanting to enter the market, you should research the industry.There are a lot of variables true. How was it people trusted a no-name company like Patreon. I had never heard of it tell 6 months ago
Do you have any sources for that? There doesn't appear to be any dip for the majority of creators, if anything things have been increasing over the last few months. Perhaps there are other explanations for what you're seeing for certain creators.You as a Dev may have noticed a dip in your donations and that is do to patreons making a mass exodus from the falling platform.
The point is that Patreon is a generic crowd funding network. Meaning it has a wide user base. So attracting people to your specific genre is easy, because the large user base is already there.I'm talking about the adult content subset not all of patreon. I talk to quite a few devs who are not happy with the drop in adult revenue
Care to name some names? As I said, just because a few creators have had their revenue decrease, doesn't mean that its because of the Patreon crackdown, there can be other reasons. Correlation does not imply causation.I'm talking about the adult content subset not all of patreon. I talk to quite a few devs who are not happy with the drop in adult revenue
Most patreon pages I see are just short description of the game with a bunch of posts behind a paywall. The patreon really isn't a promotion page. The forums do all of the promoting and people just click a direct link to the place where they can pay for it.Money issue aside, without proper promotion you won't get the same thing that patreon offers.
The point is that Patreon is a generic crowd funding network. Meaning it has a wide user base. So attracting people to your specific genre is easy, because the large user base is already there.
Also, just saying "not happy with the drop in adult revenue" is meaningless unless you have month by month earnings reports for these devs, and can directly correlate dips in earnings with changes in Patreon policy.
Roads are always bumpy and people find ways to adapt and recover. While yes, I agree that an alternative to Patreon is needed and would be amazing. The run for the hills attitude isn't productive.
Those are the die-hard incest fans who think that by removing their pledge will make the devs change their minds and risk a permanent ban to please a small minority.I'm talking about the adult content subset not all of patreon. I talk to quite a few devs who are not happy with the drop in adult revenue
I know about Graphtreon, after checking a few big names:You must be registered to see the linksmonth by month earnings reports for these devs are on this site
Ptolemy is probably dropping because he's just finished his biggest game (and the announcement of always online DRM which doesn't often go over too well either).Devs I know i can name Ptolemy, Dark Silver bigtime. Mr. Dots most of it was dropping the incest content.
Shit, you got there before me. I was just pulling data from a load of creators. Actually all the random ones I had polled before noticing your post, were on the rise from October.I know about Graphtreon, after checking a few big names:
Increasing: DarkCookie, Lewdlab, Faerin, Luxee, Palmer, T4boo, Mity, GumdropGames
Stable: KST, Beggar of Net
Dropping: Mrdots and darksilver, after 'abandoning' their games - no shit
I'm failing to see the max exodus of patrons and revenue you're describing.
That's the first of the month drop, which is usual for most games, especially those with charge upfront disabled.Darkcookie had a pretty big drop after the incest content was edited outYou must be registered to see the links