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Firestream one touch
Firestream one touch









If you're looking to optimize across that formula, the answer is you pay $10 a month for World of Warcraft. "It's always a weird dollar-to-hour calculus for how much a thing is worth. "It's always been a little strange," Anderson said of the subject. "Is this thing worth the money or not? That question has an answer, but it just depends on the person who's asking." After Ng explained the reasoning behind the game's $20 price point ($18 during the launch week), the customer updated the post to say they would keep the game after all. Shortly after launch, Campo Santo artist Jane Ng responded when one customer posted on the Steam forums that they played through the game and really enjoyed it, but were contemplating getting a refund because it was so short. The community engagement effort didn't end with the game's release.

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"It felt like a way for a more narrative, content-driven game can still engage a community like that before the game comes out," Anderson said, adding, "It was kind of interesting trying to figure out how to engage with folks into that kind of stuff, because obviously, that's how lots of people know games exist now." Anderson said it only took a couple hours to put the build together the more time-consuming problem was identifying the streamers and YouTube personalities they wanted to send the build to. Rather than ask streamers to avoid doing things X, Y, and Z that could tip the developers' hand too early, Campo Santo opted to create a new build of the game just for streamers. "There was always a tension there, given that we had a narrative, story-focused game and we kind of contorted ourselves into pretzels trying not to have a bunch of stuff in the game spoiled," Anderson said. That was also a problem when it came time to engage with the Let's Play game streaming crowd. It was just in a way that had to be more considered and deliberate, because you couldn't be like, 'Here's two random hours of the game, play it!' It just wasn't that sort of game." "At every event that was possible, we tried to engage with as many people as we could. "We certainly never assumed that by fiat alone people would care about the game," Anderson said. While many indies marketing their games go for quantity of touch points with the audience-frequent drops of new screenshots, trailers, open development blogs, and so on-Anderson said Campo Santo limited those sorts of events, but tried to maximize the impact of each as much as possible. "There was always a tension there, given that we had a narrative, story-focused game and we kind of contorted ourselves into pretzels trying not to have a bunch of stuff in the game spoiled." It should feel totally like what the game is like without giving away what the mystery part of the game is." But aside from the weird novelty of there never having been a game about that before, the premise alone doesn't really convey anything at all about what the game is.

firestream one touch

"There's the base premise that you're a guy doing this job. "Certainly Firewatch is a mystery story, so we had to be kind of cagey about what the game was," Anderson said. Speaking with recently, Campo Santo designer Nels Anderson said there was an inherent challenge to putting that campaign together. Though that's partly due to favorable reviews, the game's interesting marketing campaign no doubt played a role as well. Campo Santo's debut title Firewatch released last month and quickly outsold the studio's wildest expectations.









Firestream one touch