tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-40871493917849478162024-02-07T20:27:20.266-08:00osuuskuntahasturosuuskunta hastur blog about Hoodownr and other thingsAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.comBlogger68125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-13048845970305706202015-09-29T04:21:00.000-07:002015-09-29T23:07:50.813-07:00news from another starHello again and welcome to the latest installment of Hoodownr development blog. A lot of things have happened after the previous post.<br />
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Firstly, we did a manic push to get Hoodownr on the Google App Store. This included a lot of coding and tearing hair out and learning about google's family friendly rules. Did you know that If you don't moderate ALL chats on your game, you're really not suitable for children?<br />
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We also had a local release party on 4.9.2015 in co-operation with Tornio and Haparanda youth councils. The new graffiti wall at Putaan Koulu was unveiled and our graffiti guy Writingmotor attacked the wall with about 100 kids. 100 cans of spray got burned quite quickly by the eager little graffiti artists.<br />
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We had a promotional tent with coffee and of course there was a DJ with a nice sound system. Everybody got well excited about the painting thing and we managed to hand out a few copies of Hoodownr early access.<br />
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For our own fun after 2 years with Hoodownr, we managed to throw a party at Tornio water tower. A very neat location on the top of the city, breaking our backs carrying tons and tons of lighting and sound equipment. Merja and Anna set up a great light show for the evening and people drank, danced and there was a really bad jam session as well. Anyway we felt lucky to get the venue and people told us later that they thought they had seen an UFO with the lights shining all the way to a harbor 15 km away.<br />
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Getting the app out there on google play has been really good. We've managed to have some visibility for our game on the local media and on Facebook as well. Two weeks ago we started getting more and more playtesters all over Finland to test the game and report bugs and feature requests. This has been a very good thing and many a bug and glitch was caught, debugged and fixed.<br />
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The early access version is still missing clan chat, achievements and some other stuff but is in a fully playable shape. All the rest will happen in the weeks to come. The app is available in Finland only until we are happy with the build and have all the key features in. We might do a release in Australia soon but we'd rather wait until we can move with a modestly complete build of Hoodownr.<br />
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So the days are more about responding to feedback and coding than writing blog posts. Currently our Facebook page tells us that we are very responsive to answer people's questions and that's the way we like it.<br />
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So the freely testable build of Hoodownr is behind <a href="https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.osuuskuntahastur.hoodownr" target="_blank">this link</a> and after downloading you can test it. If you're not in Finland, google will complain about your device not being compatible but that is not the case.<br />
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So please give Hoodownr a whirl, get a few friends to walk and explore with you. Give us feedback! Get an early access account and support development, you know it makes sense!<br />
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Best,<br />
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Sami<br />
Hoodownr<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-35866248532431513282015-08-25T07:19:00.004-07:002015-08-25T07:24:16.936-07:00early access time!Hello and welcome to the obviously bi-annual blog post from the world of Hoodownr!<br />
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The good news is that we finally have an early access program to test the game on Android devices. And the program is live and you can get your early access account by paying a few euros <a href="https://holvi.com/shop/hoodownr/products/" target="_blank">here</a>.<br />
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In case this is the first time you heard about <a href="http://hoodownr.com/" target="_blank">Hoodownr</a>, here's a brief recap:<br />
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Hoodownr is a very simple game to get you out of the door, alone or with friends. After installing the app (google play store link here 4.9.2015) you log in with your early access account, see a screen with map of the locality and press the play button. After that you walk somewhere, taking your time, chilling out, and then head back where you started using a different route.<br />
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The area you walked around becomes your hood in the game. You need to walk over one kilometer, thats the minimum size of the hood. This will take about 10 minutes if you walk non stop.<br />
Upon returning to start, a magical window with a claim button appears. Tapping this button will send your run to the server. Walking alone results in a run that has the takeover power of 1. Walking with friends will result in stronger takeover power. This means that to take over a piece of land that belongs to another clan and that has been taken over by 3 people would take you three runs so ask a friend or two to join.<br />
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Hoodownr players always belong to a clan. When you get your first run, you are shown a list of clans available on the area. Join one. You can join another clan later on by making a run together with a member of that clan. On the final version of the game you can create your own clan and invite people into it.<br />
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There are all kinds of statistics on the user profile screen, kilometres walked, your adventurer status and so on. By going to places you haven't been to before, you have more fun and a better adventurer status.<br />
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That is the basic gameplay of Hoodownr. We've been working on the game for quite a long time now and have plenty of ideas of things to do in the world of Hoodownr. As an early access adopter you will be able to see new stuff coming in gradually and can take part in testing various ideas and giving feedback. We really like to play our game and we'd love to make Hoodownr into something you would enjoy.<br />
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Hoodownr does not need mobile data while you are on your run. We advise turning your phone to airplane mode while playing. We had a serious bug a while back that forced us to do just that on our test runs and it was very revealing to see various levels of panic when we had to be completely unaware about what <b>Jeff Minter</b> had <a href="https://twitter.com/llamasoft_ox" target="_blank">tweeted about his sheep</a> or some other crucial information people feed to twitter all the time. The message is to tune out at least for a while and lose your stress by doing so.<br />
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The game was designed to be unobtrusive, un-compulsive and free of spammy ads and malware. Protecting our players privacy is very important to us as we're dealing with your location data. If you so wish, you are completely anonymous to the other players around the area and your location won't be revealed to anybody unless you explicitly want that to happen. There is no opt-out scammy intelligence stuff built in the game and your personal data wont be sold to anybody ever.<br />
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The easiest gig to make Hoodownr viable and getting some kind of funding is to do exactly the opposite. We still feel very strongly about your privacy and want to see how the early access program works. We honestly appreciate you pitching in a few euros to play the game.<br />
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The state of our early access version is pretty good with basic gameplay. There will be bugs and unexpected things so as for every early access game, please understand that we are still working on this thing to ensure the best possible experience for everyone. With your early access code you will get access to the support forum to tell if you encountered a bug or have a feature request.<br />
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We're still in the process of thinking what features will be on the full version of Hoodownr when that happens. The project will evolve and we will discuss about it more frequently as there will be people actually playing and testing the game. We promise to look after you early access people even after the release.<br />
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The early access for single player is 12e, a six player combo pack to buy for you and your friends is 45e. The proceedings of the sales will go towards server bills, cat food and developing the best adventure game we can.<br />
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<a href="https://holvi.com/shop/hoodownr/products/" target="_blank">Buy the ticket, take the ride.</a><br />
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Yours,<br />
Sami<br />
Hoodownr<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-39035773619520756322015-02-23T02:02:00.004-08:002015-02-23T02:16:12.574-08:00back on black!Wow, it's really tricky to write something on the blog after what apparently was a four months break. Better late than never I guess. I wrote a 'the year that was'-text on the new years but decided not to publish it because of way too much vitriolic words in it. ahem.<br />
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Basically last year was pretty much wasted on learning the ins and outs of game business and funding, the Finnish side of the story. We got accepted into a government program that prepares small businesses for funding, attended a bunch of pitching events and spent countless of hours preparing the pitches, writing applications and other kinds of things. It was very educational for sure, but didn't bring the game any closer to you, dear reader. Towards the end of the year I felt really burned out with the biz side of things and took december off from the project to reflect and re-evaluate. That was a good decision, being focused on only one thing for too long results in anxiety and Sauron appearing in your dreams. Taking breaks is good for you.<br />
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Fundingwise we did do well but didn't get funded. Out of 15 teams that were in the program, our coach told we were in the 5 that had potential to reach our goal. Got quite close a few times but things fell flat despite investors agreeing upon our numbers and things. Only one company out of those 15 got a few K euros in the end, a piss poor show in my opinion. Non-Finnish investors, come to Finland to get a deal, nobody's getting any love from the Finnish side of the investment industry, people crying over a few K, ho hum.<br />
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After the break we decided to not to waste time on funding talks and stuff like that but focus into actually making the game any which way. Progress has been slow with our main coder having a day job and life and babies happening. I've been tinkering with the server side of things and made progress towards the playable beta. Also we've got a new guy Tom on board, we met at Oulu Game Jam and he wanted to join the project and mess around with the android codebase. After a bit of thought the answer was Yes! So there's a chance of some client updates soon, fixes to all those nasty, nasty bugs that have been delaying the playable beta for too long now.<br />
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It's funny how a project can really really get to you. I watched some Butch Vig interview where he told about the time he and Billy Corgan became complete studio rats and locked themselves into a basement for the best part of the year, endlessly tweaking and overdubbing, working on something that eventually became the Siamese Dream. I could smell the panic and terror. I saw myself in the interview and it was scary.<br />
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It's good to step out for a bit I tell you. They say the world won't wait but it will. Another mantra that keeps me going is the one Jeff Minter said when he was still going for broke and doing iOS apps :'you are making a game because you believe there's a reason for it to exist'. Even after all this time with Hoodownr, I believe there's a reason for it to happen.<br />
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This last weekend we did a couple of test sessions, uncovering new bugs and adding up to the endless pool of crash logs. In two days we walked 10km in total, spilled our guts out about this and that irritating thing in life and took a good nap after the walks. I'm quite happy to see my user screen mileage go up steadily. It's just a number but still there's something gratifying to see a testimony of your time away from the computer, your time with your friends, real life =)<br />
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Siamese dream took it's time to reach completion and it became to be one of the best rock albums ever made. Hoodownr has taken a long time and we hope to bring it to you guys during this spring. Again there are a few things on the boil and now I've got my blogging motivation back (sort of), there'll be something more to see in the very near future, promise. Meanwhile you might want to check out the Amazing's new album <a href="http://www.stereogum.com/1717185/the-amazing-picture-you-stereogum-premiere/mp3s/" target="_blank">here</a>. Or listen to some <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=06My73MgUDc" target="_blank">Chasso</a>l, he's brilliant times three.<br />
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Keep on walking!<br />
Sami / Hoodownr<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-54327525903130423432014-10-02T10:47:00.004-07:002014-10-02T11:00:59.255-07:00ello, ello, is there anybody in there? - first week on elloOne week ago I got an invitation to <a href="http://ello.co/">ello.co</a> , a new social networking site with an impressive manifesto that I will quote in full here:<br />
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<i>'Your social network is owned by advertisers.</i><br />
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<i>Every post you share, every friend you make, and every link you follow is tracked, recorded, and converted into data. Advertisers buy your data so they can show you more ads. You are the product that’s bought and sold.</i><br />
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<i>We believe there is a better way. We believe in audacity. We believe in beauty, simplicity, and transparency. We believe that the people who make things and the people who use them should be in partnership.</i><br />
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<i>We believe a social network can be a tool for empowerment. Not a tool to deceive, coerce, and manipulate — but a place to connect, create, and celebrate life.</i><br />
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<i>You are not a product.'</i><br />
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What an appealing manifesto. I registered my account immediately.<br />
The minimalism of the site took me by surprise. There are only a few buttons to click, some icons to drag and two feeds to choose from. The other feed is your friends on ello, the other is called Noise, curated posts from the world of ello. As ello is new and in a clever way restricting the number of accounts, there is not much content in there yet. It's like people are holding their breath for the conversation to happen.<br />
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There is a discovery tool (how to use it is not obvious unless you have been following the development of html5-standard for the past few years) to find people on ello. You can try to browse for friends or people you might know on ello but won't find very much there I'm afraid because of the invitation-only policy.<br />
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The noise-section is totally useless as well, apparently the moderators of ello are still too busy to make the system run somehow and have no time to curate the list. Actually the noise-list smells of abandon after you've hopefully reloaded it over the past few days and then you give up on it completely.<br />
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Some key things you have got accustomed to with social networking sites are missing. And I think they are missing for a purpose. There is no Like. This in my opinion is a pretty interesting choice. In my opinion, the Like button is a handy indicator of the amount of least possible interaction, acknowledging the author that you have read the post and feel like you want to convey your reaction.<br />
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Not having a like button might stem from an idea to make people use the comment function more. However, this does not happen. People are not commenting very much. I think partly this has something to do with most users still trying to get the feel of the 'ello world' and are refraining from commenting to avoid saying something stupid. This is wrong. I think we all have a constitutional right to make fools of ourselves on social media.<br />
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Another, way more interesting aspect about the no-like-button-disfeature is the way it sort of fights the compulsive need for acknowledgement that I think is one of the fundamental things that keeps people coming back to facebook or whatever. Of course one could argue that social media needs a way to convey acknowledgement. In contrast to having a real, face to face conversation with it's accepting nods and disapproving frowns etcetera, social media communication like a severely handicapped, deaf blind and dumb person who can only lift one finger to express approval or disapproval. The analogy might sound harsh but let's face it, computers are dumb.<br />
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On ello you can however see how many people saw your post but not who saw it. Was it a friend or a foe or a random person? How did they find me? When you keep posting things on ello (feels like you are sending letters in a bottle btw), sometimes you get a very low key e-mail that such and such is following you on ello. You can click on the followers profile to see what that person is all about. In 64 or so characters =)<br />
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Currently ello is a strange mix of twitter and facebook with more weight on twitteritude. I think ello has a lot of work ahead to streamline itself. The shroud of secrecy conveniently obscured by the minimalism of the site will put people off ello after the first login. It's ok to profile yourself as a 'not for dummies' service but come on guys, a few tooltips here and here will make things so much easier.<br />
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Likes and views are handy for facebook who needs to keep track of what kind of ads to display to you. I think there are plenty of things to experiment in this respect and ello can still keep experimenting for at least a year whereas facebook cannot do that anymore. They are stuck with views and likes and that's sooo yesteryear.<br />
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The real problem I hope ello would solve both have something something to do with the obsessive-compulsive nature of social media. How convey the reactions of your audience in a way that is more abstract and more gratifying that likes and views. It's different type of media of course but these are the things we're thinking of building Hoodownr. How to keep people coming back without resorting to predatory tactics. There has to be a better way and we have to find it.<br />
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Is ello redeeming it's obscured-by-minimalism hipster promises? Not yet. But It can. New beginnings are great for that exact reason: they are New beginnings. See you on ello!<br />
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Cheers,<br />
Sami<br />
@hoodownr at ello.co<br />
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Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-23437594326655081372014-09-22T02:53:00.001-07:002014-09-22T03:02:29.660-07:00Crowdfunding autopsy report for HoodownrOur crowdfunding campaing is finally Over! Now that was a tough 5 weeks. I thought I'll write a wrap-up immediately after the campaign and share it with everybody, maybe you can benefit from our experience. Here it goes!<br />
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<b>The Premise</b><br />
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We chose Indiegogo as our crowdfunding platform mainly because it's the biggest one available for a Finnish startup. On the outset, Indiegogo figures for game funding look pretty bleak, only ten percent of all projects actually get funded. And only 1 percent of the funded ones are games. So Indiegogo is not the most obvious choice for funding if you look at the numbers only.<br />
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However, Indiegogo has brand recognizability and many european people tend to follow and sometimes even pledge. Our goal with the campaign was to reach as many people as possible and see what kind of reaction we could get. From that angle Indiegogo was a good choice.<br />
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<b>Human network asset</b><br />
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Basic thing with crowdfunding is the idea of utilizing your existing contacts to help with the promotion of the campaign. Our total facebook contact amount was almost 800 people. Also we got to know a whole bunch of people thru all the gaming and investment events we've attended so far. There are many old contacts from the past, including a few prominent people on television and a bunch of internationally known rock stars we thought could at least put one tweet in for their fans. Looking from the social asset-point of view, we felt quite confident that we'd get some organic views thru our contacts.<br />
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<b>Publicity stunts</b><br />
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It's vital to try and get visibility also outside the campaign. For that, we managed to get a co-operation deal with the Night of Arts here in Oulu, having our booth at the event and distributing a custom demo build of Hoodownr to interested people. This was really hard work, really burning the midnight oil for over a week with the team to get the build ready. We got print media attention and lots of backlinks to our site. The effort resulted in 2000 pairs of eyes on the project. The night of the arts was a success, after the event I keep bumping into people who have at least heard of Hoodownr. A few hundred people checked out our website out of those 2000 people.<br />
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<b>The spammers</b><br />
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As I mentioned in the previous blog entry, once you start a crowdfunding campaign, you will be approached by professional spammers (they call themselves publicity specialists). They promise great success in exchange for a cut in the project proceedings. We conveniently ignored those guys because we wanted to try the spamming aspect ourselves. Spamming as in 'community outreach' or 'public relations'. The fact of the matter is that you won't get anywhere without spamming everybody. Out of 5 weeks we spend 2.5 weeks only spamming hard to get people to like our fb page and to take a look at the campaign.<br />
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<b>Game Genre related</b><br />
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As our game is a totally new idea, there was no specific genre to target really. We found that power pushing to a generic category like sports games or android games is time wasted. This should have been obvious of course. The best response we've got from the urban exploration community, followed by the live-action roleplaying crowd. This took a bit of experimenting though, starting with a more generic target group was not such a bad idea as it forced us to rethink our approach all the time. I think the bigger and generic groups produce more views but no shares or pledges.<br />
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<b>Who did pledge?</b><br />
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Going from the social asset point of here again, the most likely people to actually pledge are your friends and contacts. I read a study that says 60-70% of the pledges come from inside your own social network. That is, people who have already heard about your product and react when you give them a cue in the form of the campaign. This was indeed the case with us too. Just getting a reaction from one of your friends is challenging, you have to really push to get a like or something. If you are planning to run a campaign, do the FB like+twitter follow begging round well before actually launching the campaign. After you've done that, your target group only has two options for their reaction, the sharing or the pledging.<br />
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<b>Amping it up</b><br />
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The fact of the matter is that no matter how good your campaign is, when you are not getting people to see it, it's not going to work. Getting visibility is vital. And that is going to cost you money. During the last days of the campaign we had a chance to talk to an ex-black hat spammer who gave us a quick tour on finding your audience. Boosting up your views and getting the campaign video featured in youtube is numero uno. In a country the size of Finland the gig costs maybe 200 euros (how it is actually done is via porn site clickbaits and other dubious methods). If you pay YT for the feature, most people will just ignore it as it is clearly just another advertisement. There are also a few other very effective black hat strategies you could use for a relatively low cost. Google is your friend.<br />
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<b>Summa summarum</b><br />
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As this is getting quite long and there are a number of good guides to run your campaign on the net, I'll just wrap this up real quick. Rules of thumb for your campaign.<br />
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<br />
<ol>
<li>Crowdfunding for indie games is not about funding, it's about promotion</li>
<li>Spend 10k to make 10k. For your 10k you need to reach at least 100.000 people. simple.</li>
<li>If you know a thousand people, 2-3% of them will consider pledging / sharing your link</li>
<li>First round of spamming is the most effective. After that one start spending money.</li>
<li>People in the position of helping you out by tweeting etc, won't do it.</li>
<li>Use flexible funding. People who care about your project won't mind. honest.</li>
<li>Find a way to get coverage outside the world of internet</li>
<li>Not doing it is worse than giving it a try. Just do it!</li>
</ol>
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These rules apply to all us real indie devs. If you have big bank, a proven track record or celebrity endorsement, you can totally defy the laws of gravity. If not, do it anyway!<br />
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<b>What we got out of it (the good parts)</b><br />
<b><br /></b>
The campaign really made us focus on how to reach people. It's so much fun just making the game and testing it and it's easy to get lazy about the promotion aspect. Indiegogo made us make great leaps promotionwise. New concept art got created, we got thousands of views instead of tens of views and thru our organic approach (no black hat shit, no paid advertising) we reached numbers that are above our own projections of our market share. The days when Facebook likes kept coming on and on were really encouraging. We were really happy to get a message from Pepe Deluxe and made a few new friends along the way. All in all good times were had.<br />
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I'd recommend other indie game devs to try crowdfunding. Even if you won't meet your goal with the funding, you will most certainly move closer to other forms of funding and towards the release date. That's the real goal of it all really, to reach your players with your work. Just do it!<br />
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To be continued!<br />
<br />
Sami<br />
Hoodownr<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjzqJdrFHM51o1i5Pgb_5KFA2xaT_EvAZzZwcCCqEefaav22lkcHcHLGhqOAjZcswmRUxZGBxJn5ZAlgtTwUdajy5TcuW6-kQMnJ72iWWA8hDiA30Fh8MX3Vm5hD6jMUzEA6ZzMDMoXRYDk/s1600/hoodokoreaPic512.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjzqJdrFHM51o1i5Pgb_5KFA2xaT_EvAZzZwcCCqEefaav22lkcHcHLGhqOAjZcswmRUxZGBxJn5ZAlgtTwUdajy5TcuW6-kQMnJ72iWWA8hDiA30Fh8MX3Vm5hD6jMUzEA6ZzMDMoXRYDk/s1600/hoodokoreaPic512.png" height="320" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Haeyundae beach in Korea, let's do a bit of Hoodowning there =)</td></tr>
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-63660352023689188452014-08-30T02:05:00.001-07:002014-08-30T02:14:22.236-07:00Doing the things you loveHello All! A short update here would be in place. It's been a few weeks since we released our indiegogo-campaign and there's been a lot of e-mail typing etcetera, my typing brain has been exhausted many times over but here we go again.<br />
<br />
Maybe a lot of people have written reports about their crowdfunding campaigns but here is ours I guess. One thing that happens immediately after releasing the campaign out to the wild are the spammers that contact you and offer their services to boost your campaing, starting from 5 bucks and going up from there. In an attention economy, these services make sense I think. But it's all very shady and vague, the spammers don't show much data or metrics about the effectiveness of their efforts. Promising to spam people and making 5E sounds like an easy way to make money. I think many people fall for that kind of scam when their campaign hits a standstill.<br />
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I had a good chat with the creator of Asmo-charger, they ran a crowdfunding campaign on kickstarter a while ago. Asmo got really nice publicity thru their campaign and almost reached their goal. Of course they had a way longer preparation period, a physical product and marketing power behind them so that is natural. We chatted about why their campaign didn't quite get there and the reasons were obvious: A bit too high price for the gadget (postage costs from Finland were 17E a piece).<br />
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Another factor is that they're from Finland (strange foreigners selling their wares to the american market). Makes perfect sense, if I turn the table around, a strange Turkish guy trying to sell some stuff with a weird Finnish accent, hmm, I don't think he made too many sales over here. Selling shit is all about making appearances in the modern world. No way around that.<br />
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Our campaign has become to a bit of a standstill after weeks of spamming, that was expected. Insofar we have contacted a big number of 'industry professionals' including <b>the Pope</b>, <b>Lady Gaga</b>, <b>Ron Jeremy</b>, <a href="http://www.pepedeluxe.com/" target="_blank"><b>Pepe Deluxe</b></a> and everybody who's on our Facebook and the names on the stacks and stacks of business cards from the previous events we've attended. Not getting a response from the Pope was a bit of a disappointment, the guy's got 4 million followers on twitter, come on, tweet about our campaign!<br />
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Besides messing about with the campaign we've also messing with code. We got a deal with the night of the arts in Oulu and spend a week building some new features for Hoodownr. The adventure/notification thing took many steps ahead and the game stabilized with many bugs squashed. We had a good time at the night of the arts despite not being able to leave the booth for a long time to see all the action. Got a bit tired with the gargantuan push towards the arts-build, I think on the pictures taken from the booth we look like zombies..<br />
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Another fun happening was the visit by three Graffiti artists, <a href="http://www.ruskig.org/" target="_blank">Ruskig</a> (Sweden), <a href="http://www.theartofclean.dk/" target="_blank">Clean </a>(Denmark) and <a href="http://www.ta55o.de/" target="_blank">Tasso</a> (Germany). They came to Oulu for almost a week to partake to the street art project and painted 3 really magnificient walls here. Ruskig and Clean camped at our place and we got a glimpse of all the hard work involved making the pieces. No boozing or staying up late, oh no, the guys left early in the morning and came back when it was dark, covered in paint and dirt and fell asleep in like 3 minutes after the evening tea. I went out to film the painting process on few of the days and I got all this guilt-inducing footage on my hard drive waiting to be edited.<br />
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Since last year when we begun our wild parade with Hoodownr, quite a lot of film footage was captured. I'm planning to make a short video about the things we love in case anybody gives a shit =)<br />
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Ok, gotta move on. THE CAMPAIGN IS STILL ON guys. <a href="https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/hoodownr-game-of-discovery" target="_blank">MAKE A PLEDGE, SPREAD THE WORD</a>!<br />
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Move lovely things later,<br />
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Sami<br />
Hoodownr<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh0NpCYuSrc_yxVvU7vLoG6kMe3GPhJ5_RyUYl2SubQqRvHgDbgkIydGPrkciINGX8-L_dAZOD3qxl1MYKgM_zikiqRmOhBAN17Mq-5LgAD9z8BFwdtkrloT3HtNthbiww0j8aW0Z5rjqnK/s1600/3nin.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh0NpCYuSrc_yxVvU7vLoG6kMe3GPhJ5_RyUYl2SubQqRvHgDbgkIydGPrkciINGX8-L_dAZOD3qxl1MYKgM_zikiqRmOhBAN17Mq-5LgAD9z8BFwdtkrloT3HtNthbiww0j8aW0Z5rjqnK/s1600/3nin.jpg" height="179" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">A design meeting with Clean,Ruskig & Flop</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgfDJgkGVmnav2RQnVD4e5foiOqqXWgbEhcKBsouKIYk-6cVeguuAIO2cvSbaYXPXb00AkIfdle8nYU6tDjIom96W-Req8gVFx5fzvPM_-O5TmlnEbCK7TlKbl7OGvhbZP7zmDIAS7Rhk4z/s1600/jannenoa.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgfDJgkGVmnav2RQnVD4e5foiOqqXWgbEhcKBsouKIYk-6cVeguuAIO2cvSbaYXPXb00AkIfdle8nYU6tDjIom96W-Req8gVFx5fzvPM_-O5TmlnEbCK7TlKbl7OGvhbZP7zmDIAS7Rhk4z/s1600/jannenoa.jpg" height="320" width="179" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Encouragement from Friends during Night of arts</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjjqM1dYo4g0WKOA7aadoS5KD8iJ7tQ8pp1ClCN5H2w7C8WsYh9-TAjW8fZ8b-wBJLr88ZWUvOaAUbGrieHmN_6J3hYm16IRmdonQJDKXcTY8x69DtDGcFsm7YIFoZ2cNocdgmPBkmpez3w/s1600/serkusnoa.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjjqM1dYo4g0WKOA7aadoS5KD8iJ7tQ8pp1ClCN5H2w7C8WsYh9-TAjW8fZ8b-wBJLr88ZWUvOaAUbGrieHmN_6J3hYm16IRmdonQJDKXcTY8x69DtDGcFsm7YIFoZ2cNocdgmPBkmpez3w/s1600/serkusnoa.jpg" height="179" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Building our demo Booth</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjxH6dB1nxipE3VBqS3JtWnj3F3DEkKyr_DF8KEIdIYdR7FRIOn7GkhaZqf9EHByTS1HM4rj7rUAQl5jVlKvo3BkyOrUbpc-X0g2N3vO_Ca7zaIMZB9QRDKJ3DVThb11oW6FHgig5xFPmL0/s1600/tassohorses.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjxH6dB1nxipE3VBqS3JtWnj3F3DEkKyr_DF8KEIdIYdR7FRIOn7GkhaZqf9EHByTS1HM4rj7rUAQl5jVlKvo3BkyOrUbpc-X0g2N3vO_Ca7zaIMZB9QRDKJ3DVThb11oW6FHgig5xFPmL0/s1600/tassohorses.jpg" height="179" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Tasso painting horses</td></tr>
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-16601501242951369932014-08-13T02:59:00.001-07:002014-08-13T02:59:20.302-07:00First five days into the campaignHello and welcome to more randomness from Hoodownr!<br />
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I thought I'd write down a few thoughts after 5 days into the campaign. We originally got into planning a Kickstarter campaign over a year ago (probably said this already on the previous, Please-Make-A-Pledge-To-Make-Hoodownr-Happen, post). Jumpstarting the campaign last friday, we have learned a lot about crowdfunding.<br />
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First thing: It's a lot of work! We spent the first 4 days from morning to evening sending emails and things to people asking them to check the game out. So far we've got almost 1000 visitors on the campaign page which is quite good when considering that we not yet famous =)<br />
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Thousand visitors have translated into 3 contributions totaling 80E as of today. That is not a lot but most of the indiegogo game campaigns that started on the same day are still stuck with zero. Yes, we follow the other projects to see how everyone else is progressing, maybe we can learn something.<br />
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Most of our friends responded to our call-to-arms to spread the campaign link thru Facebook and twitter, thank you so much, you know who you are! While mercilessly spamming everyone we're also taking time to read more about other campaigns to find ideas how to improve. It's very think-on-your-feet and we like it.<br />
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One interesting thing that we didn't know to expect was the amount of comments that promoted campaign spamming services. Promises of guaranteed funding for X amount of euros. Blah, nothing we couldn't do ourselves. Some real comments would be nice. Please write your comment <a href="https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/hoodownr-game-of-discovery/x/5760185#comments" target="_blank">here</a> now!<br />
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Despite the campaign promotion madness, we have managed to take some time for testing the game everyday. On friday, we drove to Hailuoto ferry, left the car by the seaside and ferried ourselves across to the island. It was really warm still. And dark. Dark and warm seldom happens this far north and it was really magical, felt a bit like a David Lynch movie. We walked around, waded in water and found that the little kiosk had closed when we came back to the pier. It was really quiet until the distant sounds of the ferry diesel broke the silence. Relaxation happened. Take a look at the video clip to see how it was like.<br /><br />[DANG:] blogger cannot find the video, google loves google not. Click <a href="https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCy2hFfOMOtz_fvgH7LhW-kg/videos" target="_blank">this</a> to see the thing.<br /><br />Ok guys, gotta wrap this up now. More marketing madness follows. Thanks for reading, <a href="https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/hoodownr-game-of-discovery" target="_blank">please make a pledge</a>, comment and spam your friends about the game!<br />
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Sami<br />
Hoodownr<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-14308263303633641962014-08-08T08:29:00.001-07:002014-08-08T08:29:34.578-07:00Crowdfundicity!Hello again and welcome to Hoodownr-newsflash!<br />
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After a long time of scheming, we decided to release an Indiegogo-campaign for the promotion of our Indie game! If you are an indie publisher or for some other reason have looked into the intricacies of designing and running a crowdfunding campaign, you know that running crowdsourcing campaings is becoming a bit of science these days.<br />
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The preparation requires countless number of hours on excel to optimize the timing of your posts and content and public image and so on and so forth. Everything should be thought out down to a single pixel. Every move you make must be smooth like Jagger.<br />
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I think all that research and preparation that goes into designing the campaign and it's assets are critically important. However, there has to be a number of good campaigns from brilliant people with great ideas but without megabucks to spend on honing the tiniest little detail or the literary skills to impress the general public. There are heaps and heaps of projects coming in every minute and only the most pledged or whatever float on top. Does this mean that all of the rest is rubbish? Maybe not.<br />
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Last year, we took way longer than we should have fiddling and obsessing over stuff and decided not to launch a campaign. The events that followed, presenting the game to a great number of people, getting great feedback to improve it and seeing the general response and excitement about Hoodownr came into fruition with this campaign. It means less time fiddling with the code which is a bit of a bummer because we want to focus on Making the Darn Thing instead of just talking about it and spamming, spamming, spamming...<br />
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So crowdfunding has become of age, turned into something thats just used as an extension of your marketing effort, requiring huge amount of effort to pull off gathering even the tiniest sum to help to complete your thing, with or without additional funding from other sources convinced by your crowdfunding campaign. I know of few projects where the companies had received SUBSTANTIAL funding while preparing for the campaign just to gain marketplace visibility. Why not use some of that SUBSTANTIAL funding to market your thing like every other company with SUBSTANTIAL funding? And paying salaries to your campaign team?<br />
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For whatever it's worth, the future of Hoodownr hangs with the result of the campaign. We Believe that we've got something great to offer, please check our <a href="https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/hoodownr-game-of-discovery" target="_blank">indiegogo-page</a>, make a pledge or tell a friend!<br />There's other stuff going on at our <a href="https://www.facebook.com/pages/Hoodownr/398655780263743" target="_blank">facebook page</a> and on <a href="https://twitter.com/hoodownr" target="_blank">twitter </a> for those ones who like more fast paced information. We'd like to keep you informed about the ins and the outs of the campaign.<br /><br />Ok guys, this is it! Make a pledge and help something beautiful to happen Today!<br /><br />Sami<br />Hoodownr<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">instead of slick promo pic: Me and friends doing what we love. This is it!</td></tr>
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-9547864034986858062014-08-05T13:59:00.002-07:002014-08-05T13:59:40.778-07:00Summer of eventfullnessWow, a long break from the blog again. Some timely information for youz guyz now.<br />
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We attended Ropecon! It was fun! It was hot! Fliers were passed, sauna and medieval swordsmanship in the blazing sun was enjoyed!<br />
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I had a very interesting two weeks, first volunteering at H2Ö alternative music festival in the beautiful Turku, lugging stuff around in the blazing heat and entertaining ticket buyer folks at Lippakiska (small kiosk in front of Turku station that worked as some kind of unofficial H2Ö-headquarters) and trying to desperately find a chiropractor for these two norweigian artists. A very welcome break away from the computer just doing real stuff like carrying things, eating sandwiches and drinking copious amounts of coffee to keep awake thru the long nights of unpaid slave labour (i mean volunteering =) to build the grooviest festival in Finland.<br />
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And groovy it was. 100 artists, 9(!) stages in two days. And we pulled it off too! Nice crowd of hippies wondering about (I think the attendance was like 7500 people) without no fuss whatsoever, nice maze of a festival area, things were arranged so that there was a new thing to see everytime you turned around a corner. And heaps and heaps of mirrorballs. And a weird, huge, string chtulhu thing hanging from a tower crane. The preparation, festival and teardown days were easily the most fun I had this summer. Mark H2Ö down in your calendars ladies and gentlemen, if you happen to be in Finland next summer and need some groovy time with like minded entities, H2Ö is for you!<br />
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Being quite exhausted after all the work (and the heat!) I finally dragged myself down to Helsinki, the grand capital of this wonderful country. More heat, intense coding to get a sample adventure module ready for ropecon. Result: did not make it in time. Perfectionism never helps with a tight deadline. Anyway, made good progress with the thing so it was all good. Took walks around Herttoniemi, very nice part of the city near the sea and enjoyed some nice Nepalese food. Dream!<br />
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Friday happened, mr Z and about fourty others rolled out of the ropecon bus in Dipoli, espoo. They'd left 6am in the morning, the bus's air conditioning had conked out very early on and it sounded like they had a lot of fun in the bus with air temp rising over 40c with people getting sweatty and panicky by every kilometer that passed. But they made it!<br />
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Ropecon was bustling with life, two blacksmiths banging away on the parking lot, thai foooooooood stall, this and that and a long queue. We had our sailor merchant passes but joined the line with everyone else (actually that's a lie, we went to smoke with this resin doll maker and tried again when the lines were much shorter). It was hot! Getting inside the dipoli we noticed how bit the event was. And hot! We got a place at 'kokemuspiste' (the experience zone) to promote our wares and set up the table with video facility and fliers. It took about three minutes for one of our permanently stoned friends to finds us and start dispelling any non-hippies around. And there were a plenty =)<br /><br />Running the test booth was a hard exercise, it was so hot inside and the air was so bad, it was easy to tell that the building was not designed for any summer activity. But the people Gamed on! On every floor there was something going on, Boardgames, Card games, Japanese mahjong, MTG tournaments.. you name it. Being stuck at the booth was a bit of a bummer in a way, I wanted to LARP!<br /><br />Towards the end of the night me and the Tornio Hippie equipped ourselves with some beers and headed over to the sauna. Skinny dipping! It was still ultra hot but refreshing anyway. After the sauna we dragged ourselves to a nearby seashore, somebody had brought a boombox bicycle and people grouped to drink and relax. Maybe it was RPG people this time around but the beard and long hair situation hadn't changed much comparing to H2Ö. And they played Michael Jackson. And it sounded awesome. =)<br /><br />Saturday morning was more game promotion, the feedback was very good and people excited to hear about Hoodowr. All I can remember is the heat my aching bones after sleeping for few hours on this dorm kind of thing without no mattress. H2Ö won that round, at least the accommodation (some random commune where it was OK to crash at even nobody knew you) on a proper sofa doesn't kill you like a hard concrete floor. My bad tho, I foolishly thought that I would go back to the apartment for the night. Note to self: Next time prepare to be lured by Beer, Sauna and MJ and bring a mattress, even a tiny one.<br /><br />
The evening got too hot for me and after a brief visit to the DISCO LARP (of course there is a disco larp!) I headed back to get some shuteye. Sunday was just coma and softdrinks sitting on the lawn and listening to people ramble on and on about matters of extreme importance for roleplaying folks.<br />
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The bus aircon had been mended and we headed back to Oulu in relative comfort and more explicit moobs than you can shake a stick at. Our accountant and bassist Olli was kind enough to come and pick us up at 4am-is and dropped what was left of team Hoodownr back to basecamp. There was no milk for coffee, disappointed, sleep!<br /><br />All in all a lot of fun was had and now it's back to the old grindstone to finish and release the game, Last week was fiddling about with webGL again (I made a crappy summer intro at hoodownr.com in a fit of nostalgy for summer coding when life was new, take a look if you've got a webGL browser like Chrome). This week is more coding and planning and an announcement. Huuum. Ent-like.<br /><br />Hope you enjoyed! To Be Continued!<br />
<br />
Sami<br />
Hoodownr<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhzg7PY8aszXcPTDewFM-p8olwfdE6fqCIsUlboQ0GLX_Uc8KcarFZw4nhfhexP9ly0NBmPb__V2rtma6LoxWqLyroUQyLFByjR7fWrKiTq62-RL7049egELCytADP46hrJk-jZG4aIDSba/s1600/10432490_10152612222039828_7087009091895478777_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhzg7PY8aszXcPTDewFM-p8olwfdE6fqCIsUlboQ0GLX_Uc8KcarFZw4nhfhexP9ly0NBmPb__V2rtma6LoxWqLyroUQyLFByjR7fWrKiTq62-RL7049egELCytADP46hrJk-jZG4aIDSba/s1600/10432490_10152612222039828_7087009091895478777_n.jpg" height="192" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">mahjong at ropecon</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhPwTPnFrXRbhmzxdOsi9ZEdwawDlTHzNGoobtOSm_gB4O2QVZ9FPniJHj5mLy32HU-cZ1ywb6gclsWYHC9WjaC-WOFdrDZl25idoxr94ZCPvjapoL1eCuvxCfWKpKIsiZePslbu_uCrKxg/s1600/10455231_10152591970254828_8879547429760769661_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhPwTPnFrXRbhmzxdOsi9ZEdwawDlTHzNGoobtOSm_gB4O2QVZ9FPniJHj5mLy32HU-cZ1ywb6gclsWYHC9WjaC-WOFdrDZl25idoxr94ZCPvjapoL1eCuvxCfWKpKIsiZePslbu_uCrKxg/s1600/10455231_10152591970254828_8879547429760769661_n.jpg" height="192" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">lounge bar with swings and h2Ö</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjcz3vZ5AegybSkiqKG-3Ylip9ov5Ez3QjThsrPB9Q8EsYqk50e_nTGJ8cYOxcMDnV0lU6SBb8ADnDQ5Cl-6zpo4uCRroUc6qwZQBpJSsZeiO82ikRQLoyop20yohQ875jt6lbKejbcRnL-/s1600/10456819_10152591970299828_2884881222466433621_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjcz3vZ5AegybSkiqKG-3Ylip9ov5Ez3QjThsrPB9Q8EsYqk50e_nTGJ8cYOxcMDnV0lU6SBb8ADnDQ5Cl-6zpo4uCRroUc6qwZQBpJSsZeiO82ikRQLoyop20yohQ875jt6lbKejbcRnL-/s1600/10456819_10152591970299828_2884881222466433621_n.jpg" height="192" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">the real lawn lounge seating area</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiEPXxejHG7DB1Bqe4o1rHzrM6WcRjcrhYeDW7iehI-mQfI6fd6OFemX2OmHZyMMyFgd0Tv5XJ0wionE6s-WRk2Cl9cQtmpQiwR1JuLX9SBKJzfd_LTkq9v0wQv8ZwOi3PsmYxmo1CX-8Ev/s1600/10487181_10152612131799828_2643561117966355552_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiEPXxejHG7DB1Bqe4o1rHzrM6WcRjcrhYeDW7iehI-mQfI6fd6OFemX2OmHZyMMyFgd0Tv5XJ0wionE6s-WRk2Cl9cQtmpQiwR1JuLX9SBKJzfd_LTkq9v0wQv8ZwOi3PsmYxmo1CX-8Ev/s1600/10487181_10152612131799828_2643561117966355552_n.jpg" height="192" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">your arm's off!</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjDzXFWlV-4GZX249vHih0-NMCmacbE02axMoo-lkBsQPQSSfLvetQXoEcxDuSPxTb6F0NjwZxclUU9U-PbKz-ZpU62yb8mx8mvT_hR9-qZ3gUJSNyPB7zMgaR-2Tw2dbEZI2TdwuOw1xck/s1600/10492073_10152612227149828_1045367488372126020_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjDzXFWlV-4GZX249vHih0-NMCmacbE02axMoo-lkBsQPQSSfLvetQXoEcxDuSPxTb6F0NjwZxclUU9U-PbKz-ZpU62yb8mx8mvT_hR9-qZ3gUJSNyPB7zMgaR-2Tw2dbEZI2TdwuOw1xck/s1600/10492073_10152612227149828_1045367488372126020_n.jpg" height="192" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">more gaming at ropecon</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjtdclMfBiFONXW0Ugdre-aEN5vsBexY3tnj-9OxIUhlYWjHrOYYj-T5hDzzpVd__4zViSprRSqcrJn54MaADsIHNIMaeuttuDyY5TF5kZgzGjD4Lf1mYHDhxJO1TT7g0v5laXvO-GV3m_E/s1600/10494635_10152588944284828_2361746968324874777_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjtdclMfBiFONXW0Ugdre-aEN5vsBexY3tnj-9OxIUhlYWjHrOYYj-T5hDzzpVd__4zViSprRSqcrJn54MaADsIHNIMaeuttuDyY5TF5kZgzGjD4Lf1mYHDhxJO1TT7g0v5laXvO-GV3m_E/s1600/10494635_10152588944284828_2361746968324874777_n.jpg" height="192" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">the signmaker dude at h2Ö art department. it's all analogue</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgGPDf4N5trLsq0ld2ogDVeG1z-CJKu7YdMjC0_cPza7Puovs0vx5UFn9M7dtSTT6DbbhERQc487Zcagfd6niG_-vuJpe_tZ6boN0NNdJgix5ixNyR-2QiJNdzY3xVUzU4vx7OIrybeyejb/s1600/10505565_10152588944739828_1005057547216515131_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgGPDf4N5trLsq0ld2ogDVeG1z-CJKu7YdMjC0_cPza7Puovs0vx5UFn9M7dtSTT6DbbhERQc487Zcagfd6niG_-vuJpe_tZ6boN0NNdJgix5ixNyR-2QiJNdzY3xVUzU4vx7OIrybeyejb/s1600/10505565_10152588944739828_1005057547216515131_n.jpg" height="192" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">more mirror balls please!</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjn3eBkRJ23psz-fIvbA7UdYfBfspm53-a8ASadRMuKLZUOD8uHPnvjE1NUj_vKlPfR6E-blTjUxyqcdQNv9w13tT2iLt9QEfwhiwcd8vfINirXRKwOqM2FVcffw5Zy8vPjDg6O4Fv6l8dY/s1600/10527522_10152601279829828_5216430466024560434_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjn3eBkRJ23psz-fIvbA7UdYfBfspm53-a8ASadRMuKLZUOD8uHPnvjE1NUj_vKlPfR6E-blTjUxyqcdQNv9w13tT2iLt9QEfwhiwcd8vfINirXRKwOqM2FVcffw5Zy8vPjDg6O4Fv6l8dY/s1600/10527522_10152601279829828_5216430466024560434_n.jpg" height="192" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">h2ö accounting dept with the latest gadgets!</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiBTzUiGf1Xh4vNJwMBNS2zpKlsctqsJXZU52hS69BlpGkJi2X_l2MnaeYSyJc9gxPKFg19G1ABGMAaeMeyGx5W9AoMTynquV2lCQbdoWP3OBgWVkz80uFOffDqb-wCvf-RkX5PSKABlOyE/s1600/10530785_10152591970094828_3130566323005051514_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiBTzUiGf1Xh4vNJwMBNS2zpKlsctqsJXZU52hS69BlpGkJi2X_l2MnaeYSyJc9gxPKFg19G1ABGMAaeMeyGx5W9AoMTynquV2lCQbdoWP3OBgWVkz80uFOffDqb-wCvf-RkX5PSKABlOyE/s1600/10530785_10152591970094828_3130566323005051514_n.jpg" height="192" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">wish I had more shots of the site and the lights.. kick ass!</td></tr>
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-3512943213232927372014-07-12T03:26:00.001-07:002014-07-12T03:26:10.028-07:00preparing for Ropecon!Hopefully less vitriolic this time around =)<br />
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The last few weeks have been a lot of fun, had more time to focus in the game itself, got some proper coding time in that is always good. The droid client has undergone major improvements, a long weekend was spent completely overhauling the app structure to overcome a nice android feature that flushes stuff out from the memory when mem runs low. This little operation was a major pain in the butt and we're still testing to catch all the little bugs and crashes the open-heart surgery might have resulted in.<br />
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As Dr. Lukasz was crying blood refactoring, I compassionately refactored our bots, there was a lot of hasty copy-pasta code where a shared libs were needed, some really nasty hacks and all kinds of concurrency mayhem inducing duct-tape and prayer-solutions there that were dealt with. Still hacky as hell but at least not destructively hacky.<br />
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Preparing for <a href="http://2014.ropecon.fi/" target="_blank">Ropecon</a> I wanted to make a little LARP-quest for Hoodownr. The idea is based on a game design from like 5 years ago where the players are agents with specific, overlapping missions. I had planned the adventure to be redundant in a way that if a few of the players leave the game, the remaining players can continue their missions and finish the adventure. This, needless to say, adds a layer of extended complexity. =)<br />
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As we never had a real LARP test for the spy adventure, I felt I should test the game flow with intelligent bots with a bit of personality (read: level of paranoia). The whole game is based on information and how trustworthy the players regard others and the stuff that comes to light. I was quite tired after the big bot overhaul but still sat down to tinker about with javascript (great for lightning fast prototyping). And went on for like 38 hours straight. =)<br />
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After that 38 hours, the bot players roamed about locations, learned about other players and tried to syphon out information from the other players and tried to compute the trustworthiness of the information received. OO is really great for this. Gandalf enters and sees Thorin that starts to sing about gold. Except in our case it's Barry that enters and enquires the lady in the purple helmet if she is indeed Mary. The lady tells that she is actually Steve, a hobbyist female impersonator. This contradicts with what Tom and Dick told Barry and he has to evaluate his next move.<br />
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I think I could spend ages tweaking the thing, it's so much fun. Not really sure if the adventure part can be finished for Ropecon but gotta try! =)<br />
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This weekend we're filming another little hoodowning video and trying to improve our site a little bit by taking massive shortcuts. So much to do,so little time. Next week I'm off to Turku to help out at <a href="http://www.h2ofestival.fi/2014/" target="_blank">h2ö-festival</a>, see Hawkwind and enjoy the summer. You do the same!<br />
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See you at Ropecon guys!<br />
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Sami<br />
Hoodownr<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-49454574178369227502014-07-04T03:38:00.000-07:002014-07-04T04:00:11.794-07:00intricacies of proper Indie development rantYet another fascinating update from the world of Hoodownr!<br />
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Again, the past few months have been a blur of activity for us. Earlier this spring we got into a program that prepared us for the <a href="http://www.pitchfestoulu.com/" target="_blank">Midnight Pitch Event</a> to present our game to potential investors. Yep, who wants that honey as long as there's some money kind-of. The training program was really good, we got a lot of feedback and ideas about the game from people on the business side of things and managed to clarify our goals etcetera and so forth. Vital importance!<br />
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The pitch fest came, we had a flyer and t-shirts printed and all that stuff thanks to KM's lovely guidance, no hippie rugs this time like at Assembly, professional edges all around! =)<br />
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The actual event was held in sandy Nallikari, we pitched the game in front of a live audience and held a show-and-tell booth backstage, giving out fliers, showing the video and luring investment. We got a really great response from players and govenment people who are involved with activating nation to have more exercise. A coordinator from the Finnish occupational health institute was very keen to co-operate. One investor popped by to tell us specificly that this is not their field, thanks for the info, asshole.<br />
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As always, we're targeting this blog to indie developers as well as gamers. Hence the rants. Hmm here we go:<br />
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Any regular studio would report their Midnight Pitch festival experience as a resounding success. In a way, that is true. The number of new connections and new information that came to light is awesome and we also had a great, private afterparty at Kulttuuribingo with a DJ flown in from Japan and a kick-ass jam session till 4am in the morning. Party: great. But looking from the goals point of view it was a disappointment. We went in to find funding and that didn't happen. So that bit was well fucked. Moving on to pocketgamer:<br />
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We decided to do <b>Pocket Gamer Connects Helsinki</b> and went there a few days after Midnight pitch. No booth this time but the engines were well warm to pitch the game. Again so many people were met, so many people wanted to sell us their shit but in general it was good, the feedback we got from Hoodownr was great. People love it =)<br />
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On the afterparty side of things, our PR lady km got herself on the <b>Rovio</b> table while I was talking to <b>Fingersoft</b> and a bunch of Chinese publishers that are looking into new games that already have a track record of <i>ten million downloads</i>. That's just fantastic, chinese install expectations scale well in Finland with less than 6 million people. Anyway those guys were funny so that was good enough.<br />
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Met loads of other devs and had good exchanges with everybody. I really loved this new game called <a href="http://www.windowsphone.com/fi-fi/store/app/pako/c35daa9b-e996-4a70-8515-1b36442cd9ea" target="_blank">Pako</a>, it's out on for windows phone, check it out! There was a few more interesting titles out there, cannot remember the names now but I guess I'll save that stuff for a tweet someday =)<br />
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We met<b> Oscar Clarke</b> and <b>Bob Heuel</b> again and had a really nice word with them, Oscar was happy with our flier and said 'I'd buy that for a dollar' =)<br />
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Not being able to take people for a test run was a bummer, it was raining cats and dogs in Helsinki. But showing the video and our alpha worked out fine. No investor love this time around either, people at pocket gamer are looking for a copy of an existing succesful product which is always the way forward. The logic goes: <i>It's angry birds with a twist</i> == <i>angry birds is making money</i> === <i>this could also make money for me</i>. It's bad form not trying to copy anything but to build something original.<br />
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Currently there appears to be lot of investment money around for games business. Investment events pride with the amount of capital the attending investors have in total. In reality, a very small part of that translates into actual investment I'm afraid. <b>Slush</b>, <b>pitchfest</b> etc. from the indie dev perspective are mostly about complacent, rich penguins coming to hear other rich penguins talk and then watch the trained monkeys and village idiots (us indie developers) trying to amuse them with elevator pitches. And it's all very serious business and costly too.<br />
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The benefit of connecting with people cannot be denied. If you as an indie decide to put the money down to attend, I think thats a good thing to do. You need to meet people and talk about your game. Go with that expectation only. Finish your game, have an alpha and marketing materials and business plans all ready, create sales, you have a chance. If you only have a paper napkin full of doodles, stay at home. The events we went were all really hardball. I saw many Indies who had flown from across the world getting increasingly more sad at their demo booths when they realized that this<i> is not going to help </i>with finishing their game. Uh-ah.<br />
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The problem I feel is that with the current situation here in Finland is that money and talent don't meet like they should. Small studios talk about the shitty publisher deals they were forced to make, bigger studios talk about the shitty investment deals they had to make where they do the work and somebody gets the money if they do their work well. This is quite an oppressive climate for the newbie: Aren't games supposed to be fun?<br />
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Best piece of information at pocket gamer connects I heard in the toilet, two Finnish game enterpreneurs talking while taking a leak: Don't waste your time with Finnish investors, take American money, you get more and easier. I made a note to self about that. =)<br />
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So summa summarum, if you want to make your own game and release it, <b>remember</b>: <i>Nobody is going to give a shit</i> about you or your team or your game until it's almost finished. After over one year of development we're getting there. And it feels good. It's worth it!<br />
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There will be another foray into demoing Hoodownr and that is going to happen at Ropecon 2014 in Espoo, 25-27.7. We'll be there, come over and Say Hello!<br />
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Boom boom!<br />
<br />
Sami<br />
Hoodownr<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhsVyPw0AEvQxBbUKcOCPUHwXXHNSmHYGs1kjchhacbSjFbLifhpCOjSV5wv3PzHgykAKchDFGkucEc0jkeYVDrcgt9Mtrb7lLezuvJWdRJe7iP1jIZ6UfDP38mXEFxc5Vc2ldwRopiRRmO/s1600/posterback.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhsVyPw0AEvQxBbUKcOCPUHwXXHNSmHYGs1kjchhacbSjFbLifhpCOjSV5wv3PzHgykAKchDFGkucEc0jkeYVDrcgt9Mtrb7lLezuvJWdRJe7iP1jIZ6UfDP38mXEFxc5Vc2ldwRopiRRmO/s1600/posterback.jpg" height="320" width="227" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">get amplified!</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhG0nmdZpbIJHq_p85oJ3_k_bmEwt9id_JAyp7Vedn5OSn_6EwGi9VwGsgJZZaaXmumYAI2rO1jzZ8PW2B5sngK5VnbsA8GF0BJedNKx_QuAdtvEyHMmj6O5F4VyQ35Jv6DoEpBFWbDM7Ix/s1600/texas.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhG0nmdZpbIJHq_p85oJ3_k_bmEwt9id_JAyp7Vedn5OSn_6EwGi9VwGsgJZZaaXmumYAI2rO1jzZ8PW2B5sngK5VnbsA8GF0BJedNKx_QuAdtvEyHMmj6O5F4VyQ35Jv6DoEpBFWbDM7Ix/s1600/texas.jpg" height="179" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">the Pitch team. Don't mess with Texas!</td></tr>
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-59168515553166325202014-06-02T22:58:00.000-07:002014-06-02T23:31:02.919-07:00burning calories and getting fresh airHello all, it's time for an update again. Needless to say, things have been very hectic here at Hastur headquarters, trying to unroll a few of the latest events here.<br />
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A month ago, I flew to Krakow, Poland to attend the Digital Dragons event to take part in the Big Indie Pitch and to talk about our game. It was still very cold in Finland but pleasantly warm in Poland, arriving to Krakow airport I was greeted by this great summery scene, a huge picture of the pope printed on the parking lot wall and bus ticket vending machine that didnt't work. Welcome to Poland!<br />
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After a bit of shuffling about, I hopped on a bus to the city center, the old town where our hotel was. Turned out that the hotel was really close to the spot where the bus stopped, the room was nice and I went to sample some mc Donalds, my first big mac in a new country. I'm sorry if you hate maccers, I tried to find KFC but got too hungry and frustrated.<br />
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Spent the day in the hotel room obsessing about our pitch for the next day. In the evening Mr Z came from Lomza and we hit the old town to eat some nice pasta and drink heaps of white russians. Of course we had to, they were tasty and inexpensive and nice and the Polish are not skimpy about their vodka so the caucasians had a nice bite to them. Catching up with mr Z was a lot of fun, he'd been away for a while to take care of some stuff in Poland. I got a warm welcome and in a true Polish fashion got very inebriated. Disclaimer: Kids, inebriation is not good for you, drink responsively!<br />
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Wednesday was more pitch preparation and in the evening we headed to this club where the big indie pitch was held. Loadsa people queuing to pitch, long, slow moving lines and of course, beer. We met our friends from Createrria and hung around waiting for our turn.<br />
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The pitch was not the usual auditorium affair but this speed dating thing where you were assigned to a table with two people and had to state your business in four minutes until the gong rang. There were like 7 tables with various people, publishers and the press and some people who were there just to try to sell you their shit for your game. For a first timer it was a jarring experience, we went in to discuss our funding situation but the speed-dates were only interest in a release date and what to write on their sites and so forth. Generally it looks like pitching at pocketgamer events such as Digital Dragons is good for promoting your game and nothing much more.<br />
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Maybe the speciality of DD was that it was mainly geared towards Polish projects that are looking for a Polish publisher with Polish publisher budget. In our case, presenting the game is quite difficult as you actually need to get out and play it, problem that we've experienced along the way, so we showed the video and chatted about the game.<br />
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The following day's stuff was good tho, we went to see many presentations about how to release an indie title and what kind of moves to make to get there. I went to see Julian Gollop (of x-com and chaos reborn fame) and he showed some really nostalgic stuff from the eighties. Did you know that his first game, chaos, was published by Games Workshop for the ZX Spectrum back in the day when they were just a two man and a donkey operation working at their mums? That was way before they trademarked the words 'I' and 'And' and 'SpaXe maXines'. That was cool.<br />
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Julian told about his trials in the regular games business and why he wanted to try kickstarter to fund his 'indie' game Chaos reborn. Sure enough he's the guy with the fame but even for him it took considerable effort to plan and run his campaign to reach his goal. Julians famous buddies had told him that if he'd kickstarted a year ago, he'd probably pulled in money in the X million range instead of X hundred thousand range. For us N00b indie devs you'd probably be able to pull 20K if you worked really really hard on the campaign, more if you get Ricky Gervais and Lord British to tout about your idea on twitter/reddit whatever. Anyway the thing that had worked for Julian was to release a browser-playable preview of the game on the last stretch of the funding run.<br />
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We listened to quite many indie devs and their experience is that get testing early, get a closed beta or stuff like that started really really early to get feedback and so such. We re-evaluated our strategy considering the tests and decided that is what we need to be doing, giving people the alpha to play.<br />
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So after DD, besides training for the Midnight Pitch fest and doing the business stuff, we've been hell bent to produce a playtest build and have a few playtesting events near Oulu to get people to see our thing. This means that most of the stuff that goes into the primeval basic Hoodownr is ready. And that my friends is a lot of stuff! And that lot of stuff has translated into lot of frantic hours to prepare our next alpha over the past few weeks, a total chaos of coding, testing, walking, cycling, changing diapers (two members of the Hoodownr team just became fathers) and so on an so forth.<br />
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We're hoping to wrap up our next playable for this week and have a playtest event at <a href="https://www.facebook.com/pages/Kulttuuribingo/111198005635918" target="_blank">Kulttuuribingo</a> here in Oulu. There will be an annoucement about that on our <a href="https://www.facebook.com/pages/Hoodownr/398655780263743" target="_blank">FB page</a> in the next few days, keep on close watch ladies and gentlemen!<br />
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All in all, DD was a good experience and We had a lot of fun in Krakow. Meeting Oscar 'lost on location' Clark was groovy, as a LARP-person he was really digging Hoodownr. Bonus!<br />
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I wish I could go for a proper holiday to Krakow some day, the city is full of history and amazing things to see, time to shake off any Poland related prejudices and see for yourself I say!<br />
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Many more things to tell soon! Come and be blown away by our pitch at the <a href="http://www.pitchfestoulu.com/" target="_blank">Midnight pitch fest</a> next week and have a chat and a spanking new Hoodownr flier while you're at it. See you soon!<br />
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Sami<br />
Hastur<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjOgNz9Ck_y5TKTENCvirvl5rn2hlFiSoG1ZHSjJPRWp9IgkDSvBVvMPk0ipF74bvE5nJ9NrW3KuKg3sBOtlsl5lQNbdJP3mKq0xLNFH9jgfkn-9OvTkd_jPMCmSZasPE04WH6EK8MZiaup/s1600/10295666_10152422696814828_7971948225851806835_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjOgNz9Ck_y5TKTENCvirvl5rn2hlFiSoG1ZHSjJPRWp9IgkDSvBVvMPk0ipF74bvE5nJ9NrW3KuKg3sBOtlsl5lQNbdJP3mKq0xLNFH9jgfkn-9OvTkd_jPMCmSZasPE04WH6EK8MZiaup/s1600/10295666_10152422696814828_7971948225851806835_n.jpg" height="179" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Mr Gollop!</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjJJ_Sw_mM6338sDoc-Snf9a3cOh4vJ8FF1XbnnESObAOnxxf-NpySAUGMDkPKbECZ1PLGeGs3Ha_tVai_cMgKgiMjHbWbaiOSeIXLv4MOGJjEst0fzGjQPuIWAZ53bt3FV9VnMyqYy1JSZ/s1600/10320567_10152424567154828_3852308397890495898_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjJJ_Sw_mM6338sDoc-Snf9a3cOh4vJ8FF1XbnnESObAOnxxf-NpySAUGMDkPKbECZ1PLGeGs3Ha_tVai_cMgKgiMjHbWbaiOSeIXLv4MOGJjEst0fzGjQPuIWAZ53bt3FV9VnMyqYy1JSZ/s1600/10320567_10152424567154828_3852308397890495898_n.jpg" height="179" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">the Polish ministry of Economy-booth</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgkMMGW2YoLz6pDpiBArN5uYpDFKBAhLLSSglvcH5ZOcjaKFtjYZsf_1s8AmdlKMAf_V7vaV5dU5yikkRVOkelGY3HhvnLikfs2wo_DVcoixx73OTVy8C2-s8uYAmh2i3nlRgZe6NBTnsIh/s1600/10322727_10152422694364828_7760575588175414238_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgkMMGW2YoLz6pDpiBArN5uYpDFKBAhLLSSglvcH5ZOcjaKFtjYZsf_1s8AmdlKMAf_V7vaV5dU5yikkRVOkelGY3HhvnLikfs2wo_DVcoixx73OTVy8C2-s8uYAmh2i3nlRgZe6NBTnsIh/s1600/10322727_10152422694364828_7760575588175414238_n.jpg" height="179" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">we had to pimp our passes</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjvtA_ptUo-euNDBiID1pfnUuQD7PiKvEa3Mfeh1ekF4tp5UPhcgqhPSXeZLLehYvBC_yDYmgpaLp7JOqidtaeqbhkm4tKhMcdgi6js7bGniS42tbWpsNhq14wdVoQpNDfRK7KTaC2BRyBY/s1600/10356359_10152443933194828_4418524449870604237_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjvtA_ptUo-euNDBiID1pfnUuQD7PiKvEa3Mfeh1ekF4tp5UPhcgqhPSXeZLLehYvBC_yDYmgpaLp7JOqidtaeqbhkm4tKhMcdgi6js7bGniS42tbWpsNhq14wdVoQpNDfRK7KTaC2BRyBY/s1600/10356359_10152443933194828_4418524449870604237_n.jpg" height="179" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">back in Oulu, fun stuff at Kulttuuribingo</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg9xkGCsVEXrO19KE90Lu81ElobDHynwcHa78ZX-z53nBws432SlwLLKa1sEqZzd0bAekUf1eLHqG_noWQ595cRTKzEjfIe7Pw6tkiGwta4Cs5Ec_0_IKug78LETUcPgwKIHjnGc08pjrfD/s1600/10360631_10152443934669828_1607391956286456944_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg9xkGCsVEXrO19KE90Lu81ElobDHynwcHa78ZX-z53nBws432SlwLLKa1sEqZzd0bAekUf1eLHqG_noWQ595cRTKzEjfIe7Pw6tkiGwta4Cs5Ec_0_IKug78LETUcPgwKIHjnGc08pjrfD/s1600/10360631_10152443934669828_1607391956286456944_n.jpg" height="179" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">The Bingovision Hasturphonic zx-6000!</td></tr>
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-9110062256044430152014-04-30T03:42:00.001-07:002014-04-30T03:47:00.202-07:00There'll be Dragons!Hello again, it's been a while since We last embarked on a public relations effort in the form of a blogpost. Well here we go again.<br />
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Some news about the Hoodownr-operation, we got accepted to pitch our game at the <a href="http://www.digitaldragons.pl/en/news/598-the-big-indie-pitch-digital-dragons" target="_blank">Big indie pitch</a> -event in Krakow, Poland (Out of all the places in the world). The date will be 8th of May, next weeks wednesday. Big indie pitch is organized by Steel Media, the powerful force behind Pocket Gamer and 148apps. Lots of international press, bling, publicity and so such in store.<br />
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We'll get a chance to meet our assembly (and the associated shadow-event boozembly) friends behind <a href="http://incuvo.com/" target="_blank">Createrria</a> to talk shop which is always fun: meeting people you've met along the way. A personal highlight would be listening to Julian Gollop's presentation, he's the dude who started coding turn based strategy games on a ZX Spectrum a million years ago and created Chaos, Laser Squad and X-Com later on.<br />
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Julian's now working on a reimagining of Chaos for pc's, please take a look at <a href="http://www.gollopgames.com/" target="_blank">his website</a> and check the game out <a href="https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1206403106/chaos-reborn-from-the-creator-of-the-original-x-co/" target="_blank">on Kickstarter</a> too! Looks like the Kickstarter was a great success, the game is really going to happen!<br />
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Motivationally speaking, if we really push it, there might even be a chance for an ubergeekish photo opportunity with the guy =)<br />
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Getting quite deep in the business side of things these past two months it'll be great to actually get to talk about the game and do some Hoodowning in Krakow. You couldn't believe how many daunting things there are when it comes to making a game. And how many ways to get there, I'm getting the sense of the old Lauryn Hill song Lost One that goes '<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdNFFC0p7N4" target="_blank">There come many paths and you must choose one</a>'. True that. The Krakow trail is yet another one.<br />
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Well the adventure considering Hoodownr continues. The past weeks we've talked to a few really interesting people about the live-action role-playing aspect of the thing and a couple of dudes who do some freeform esoteric psychogeography here in Oulu (Out of all the places, again).<br />
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Heading to Krakow with our sharpened pencils and the general idea that Jeff Minter shared in his twitter feed a while ago:<br />
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<i>'Game design should be about creating something that you passionately believe should exist, that you really want to share with others.'</i></div>
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We're doing just that. Catch you further down the road, people! Come and say hello to us at Krakow if you happen to be there. We're the ones with long hair and ponchos. =)</div>
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Finally, here's an earworm for your labor day lunch. Nicole Willis and the Soul Investigators. Dig it!</div>
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Sami</div>
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Hastur</div>
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-37941591466358956552014-04-11T04:40:00.000-07:002014-04-11T04:41:37.429-07:00a-rollingHello again. The past few weeks have been a blur for us. We got in touch with Business Oulu and have been working on our marketing plans and investor decks etcetera. Lots of coffee consumed, paperwork and phonecalls and things. Da business side of the Hoodownr enterprise.<br />
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We attended the Oulu Game Spring event last week and met some really nice people with great ideas and advice about where to go with the game. Hell, we even managed to (somewhat?) impress the Paradox ceo, Fred Wester, with our concept. Please find an obligatory hanging out with rockstars-proof picture further down this post.<br />
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Mr Janne the beard also moved to Oulu last week and we're having more Hastur people living here in Oulu now. Me and Janne have been frequenting Kulttuuribingo (local, camp hastur style creative hangout/live venue/artspace). My perspective after attending gamespring and various other gaming events is that there's not enough focus on creativity and too much focus on funding.<br />
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So our mission now is to produce an event here in Oulu, mixing the game dev/business style people with the creative folks. A melting pot of sorts, all in the best possible taste. Looking at the end part of may, the event will provide an alternative angle on how to think about games, creativity and the joy of discovery. The preparations are moving well along, more data here as the thing solidifies.<br />
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On the software front, we've got a fresh new build of Hoodownr with improved graphics and most of the advanced new stuff we've been working on for a while now. Can't wait to field test with a group. Maybe at the event?<br />
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Coming to Oulu has meant focusing more and more on the various gameplay and longevity related ideas. And filling forms and talking to more and more people. Busy beez..<br />
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Today consists of more work towards the Event and finally upgrading this mac's hard drive. So much fun reinstalling all of the software and migrating things, can't wait!<br />
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Short note this time around, stay tuned!<br />
<br />
Sami<br />
hastur<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgijIq83ePbtj1L_fNLf8zC3ArMXfxXoGD3SjFQIBoeI_BCcl7rmVM0kxCY4PZ4n9I_CbeNK52WBEILJGcC6-dJMIvKJEUQ7iiA-zR6iQVePu3HlsCJ5mJikPCekL0NA32_eCs36_yQj2K5/s1600/1604766_10152338981639828_1199078532_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgijIq83ePbtj1L_fNLf8zC3ArMXfxXoGD3SjFQIBoeI_BCcl7rmVM0kxCY4PZ4n9I_CbeNK52WBEILJGcC6-dJMIvKJEUQ7iiA-zR6iQVePu3HlsCJ5mJikPCekL0NA32_eCs36_yQj2K5/s1600/1604766_10152338981639828_1199078532_n.jpg" height="179" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">when mr Z met with Fred</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi68R5NWC-bc0kL5oJzTYM7YJkIrnXaZ1o7QemapgnTjaS5TT04kgcIuS4rjMXeGqH29xAIQPaMqd6EnuBVBq4EqLZAPFrdCM09XSvO597qhtHdD-lJ_3-5r4v51_zBXPf6Cz_B9nSjQ1Bi/s1600/1982088_10152332460759828_1466127444_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi68R5NWC-bc0kL5oJzTYM7YJkIrnXaZ1o7QemapgnTjaS5TT04kgcIuS4rjMXeGqH29xAIQPaMqd6EnuBVBq4EqLZAPFrdCM09XSvO597qhtHdD-lJ_3-5r4v51_zBXPf6Cz_B9nSjQ1Bi/s1600/1982088_10152332460759828_1466127444_n.jpg" height="206" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">mr Petri Loukusa came in to camp over for the weekend to produce gfx</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhrZEB5ChSOug2mlTpkzZLrSCkbFTPy54Q4BHSAbh_0NvzPne0b34J5zMkeVju_9e2lXSEYXQR3riDG1YpG5xdUFunDQJqLEQTMeZQ_TVJegKExyK_wC1EXcMNr-dbjlkyEECWoVWIW75R5/s1600/10175972_10152355937209828_3820199690482073052_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhrZEB5ChSOug2mlTpkzZLrSCkbFTPy54Q4BHSAbh_0NvzPne0b34J5zMkeVju_9e2lXSEYXQR3riDG1YpG5xdUFunDQJqLEQTMeZQ_TVJegKExyK_wC1EXcMNr-dbjlkyEECWoVWIW75R5/s1600/10175972_10152355937209828_3820199690482073052_n.jpg" height="179" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">few lovely gals at Kulttuuribingo yesterday</td></tr>
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-48324081017938282182014-03-24T06:36:00.003-07:002014-03-24T11:08:08.205-07:00oulu street art jam - street heats, bongo beatsHello again and sorry for the long delay again. We moved to Oulu a few weeks back and we've been busy getting organized here. So many people to meet and things to do..<br />
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From the point of view of a indie game dev from Lappland, Oulu is the only possible move if you don't want to end up in Helsinki. The topic of heading here came about when we did the polar bear pitching thing and were offered this nice apartment to use for development and relaxation.<br />
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In a few weeks time we've got more things going businesswise than in the past few months in Tornio. It's so easy to go to a meeting when you don't have to drive 130 kilometers thru the wind and snow, in the dark. In Oulu, a bicycle trip is all we need. Great!<br />
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As we've got many friends who are based in Oulu, we have also had the opportunity to talk about the project to a few professionals who work on marketing and graphic design (the areas we need help with because it's more fun to code than do spreadsheets=). There's interesting stuff on the boil as always with a few additions to the hoodownr team in the near future.<br />
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As osuuskunta hastur, we felt like we need to make an entry to the Oulu scene and wondered what way should we go. A few weeks ago our graffiti artist<b> <a href="http://www.stigolavtony.com/" target="_blank">Stig</a></b> (of the <a href="http://hoodownr.com/" target="_blank">hoodownr logo</a> fame) got in touch and told he and his girlfriend <b>Sofia Waara</b> and another Swedish street-art dude <a href="http://www.ruskig.org/" target="_blank">Ruskig</a> are coming over to Oulu to paint a bit and he asked me If we could accommodate them and find a wall and a bunch of paints. I said of course and set out to find a way for the street art jam to happen.<br />
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After contacting this local culture person/personality, <b>Paavo Heinonen</b>, I was informed that there actually is a <a href="http://oulunkatutaide.wordpress.com/" target="_blank">street art project in Oulu</a>, they've been negotiating with the city for a few years to get permissions to use public walls for street art. Things had moved on a snails pace tho. Mr <b>Petteri Parhi</b> from the street art group figured that the time to get this thing really flying is now and so we flew!<br />
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Petteri cleared permits for the walls and I called a few sponsors (<a href="http://realdeal.fi/" target="_blank">RealDeal</a> & <a href="http://geezers.fi/">Geezers.fi</a>) that kindly helped us with cans and cans of paint. By thursday everything was ready and it started to snow really heavily after few weeks of no snow. How's this going to work out now?<br />
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Luckily, the snowfall stopped by saturday morning and the guys rolled their sleeves up and powered by veggie pizzas, did the basecoat and got sketching. Ubercoolness and underground manouvers were performed and we took turns babysitting the artist's kids. Despite popular belief, street art is fun for the whole family!<br />
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The weekend was really great, hard work but so much fun hanging out with our friends, painting and non-painting. There's still over a few hours of footage to edit to get a video out but I'm hoping to finish the jam vid by the weekend. Anywayz, million thanks to Realdeal + Geezers, check their stuff out on the web and <b>buy some shit</b>, you know you need it! =)<br />
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Next weekend is a different kind of jam with Pete and Photoshop/Illustrator and digital media that will hopefully grace your screens any day real soon now(tm).<br />
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keep reaching up,<br />
Sami<br />
Hastur<br />
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<table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg4ObraCCGELURkWoJ2QwKo97syccqtbQgZG_eCtmG6ZaBfNFUCU1PEqC2z_BsBGp9Ng41RTwmGk7K03zGXMLR9Y_XRVPITdyiaRlwb7ZapMRz0aEf_720XoLLBT5AABf6ZpYdmpYSf8mLW/s1600/karry.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg4ObraCCGELURkWoJ2QwKo97syccqtbQgZG_eCtmG6ZaBfNFUCU1PEqC2z_BsBGp9Ng41RTwmGk7K03zGXMLR9Y_XRVPITdyiaRlwb7ZapMRz0aEf_720XoLLBT5AABf6ZpYdmpYSf8mLW/s1600/karry.jpg" height="240" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">pram-a-lot! used for transporting toddlers not paints!</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjimNT4yBVKUzBrXk2gHJFi8xTrB2QuPRfkItG6txykLSw9Kxu2cuC3UYt45IYufraivC9iCOx0jNH4f4hsflr8N9hMgvVBdYVd0csMvUbq9Oc7DpxwZnRNn919J5lSGCgiCY5cDsEadIqj/s1600/paints.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjimNT4yBVKUzBrXk2gHJFi8xTrB2QuPRfkItG6txykLSw9Kxu2cuC3UYt45IYufraivC9iCOx0jNH4f4hsflr8N9hMgvVBdYVd0csMvUbq9Oc7DpxwZnRNn919J5lSGCgiCY5cDsEadIqj/s1600/paints.jpg" height="240" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">us geezers got the real deal! Paints galore!</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjQYG7P8v7i14VxFwpOPHi2JJ3QufKs75fcl935xXmdVbTWoyNnqI3I5RV5l9aPRp6bIadmHwc48G-6QL9xP-uyQU16lHoz8Df28NazGi7HP9su9WXnkaoBOSUB20ns4owPenm5DpCZrTjT/s1600/rocking.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjQYG7P8v7i14VxFwpOPHi2JJ3QufKs75fcl935xXmdVbTWoyNnqI3I5RV5l9aPRp6bIadmHwc48G-6QL9xP-uyQU16lHoz8Df28NazGi7HP9su9WXnkaoBOSUB20ns4owPenm5DpCZrTjT/s1600/rocking.jpg" height="240" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">work in progress shot. Stig and Sofia in action!</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjz2x4WTCrewrTcHak_B35tfZQ_eLw_3AAahFl9KN0uZv2bTkWMdsfojonBzoF_ESuRX9N0G92RVXAjpTv4qnAyyjS1AXe87-mX6_148INhUDou8mrBoAVNK3l7Xpbypu2VW9Os5-K-7_x5/s1600/streetartoululogo.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjz2x4WTCrewrTcHak_B35tfZQ_eLw_3AAahFl9KN0uZv2bTkWMdsfojonBzoF_ESuRX9N0G92RVXAjpTv4qnAyyjS1AXe87-mX6_148INhUDou8mrBoAVNK3l7Xpbypu2VW9Os5-K-7_x5/s1600/streetartoululogo.jpg" height="165" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">the logo!</td></tr>
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-21125193925875310892014-02-19T03:48:00.002-08:002014-02-19T04:04:37.906-08:00tales from a hole in the icePast few weeks flew by in a flash, sorry about no bloggy stuff for awhile.<br />
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Few weeks ago we took part in <a href="http://www.pitchfestoulu.com/polarbear/" target="_blank">Polar Bear pitching event</a>, the idea was of getting nipple-deep into a hole in the ice and pitching your project as long as you could in the freezing water.<br />
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We saw the polar bear pitching event pitcher guy (appropriately dressed as a polar bear) at Slush last year and thought that it's the worst idea ever. Who wants to get in the icy water, no way!<br />
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In true Osuuskunta Hastur style, we are very nimble to change our opinions about things and decided to give the ice hole a go. Even though I'm Finnish, I had never tried ice hole swimming however healthy it's supposed to be. So It was a first to me and Mr Z (poland) as well.<br />
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As we arrived to the event site and got registered, the ladies asked us will you guys be pitching from the ice hole. Mr Z's face froze suddenly (he had tried to escape from a moving vehicle just 10 minutes earlier to avoid going into the water). After about one second of hesitation, I said yes, we're going into the hole. Yeah baby!<br />
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We walked to the pitching site and watched the first batch of pitches and despite wearing full winter clothing, man it was cold out there. Looking at the people going into the hole physically hurt. It was hard to believe we would be going in there soon. Obviously if our mission is to produce a game of discovery, we absolutely must go out of our own comfort zones as well so : man's gotta do what man's gotta do!<br />
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We moved to Jääli swimming pool to get our bathrobes, slippers and things and went to the changing room. People who'd already pitched came in one by one and told us that it was not so bad. Just build your core temperature before going in, do push-ups and the sort and you'll be fine. I did my tai-ji routine for 20 minutes to warm up while Z had a few beers to build courage. With me waving my hands about the changing room space must have looked a lot crazier than the beer consumption..<br />
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Our turn came and we were picked up by a car in front of the swimming pool. To my surprise, the air that felt very chilling an hour ago with a thick snowboarding jacket on, didn't feel that bad after the warm-up with just swimming trunks and a bathrobe on. The car took us to the site and since we were first of the batch, we were quickly directed to the stage.<br />
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Mr Z thought we would go to a sauna before the ice hole (would be a standard practice here in Finland) but oh no, we went in directly. It was freezing but not so bad. Only thing I remember is that I nearly fell off the little platform that was built inside the hole (scary). After getting up from the cold water, we were interviewed by the bear who was amused by Mr Z's outfit (Suomi t-shirt, Aloha shorts and slippers, like he was going to the beach). Then it was time to head to the mobile sauna to warm up and then head to the transportation.<br />
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All in all we had a really memorable experience with the ice-hole pitching. There was food and beer at the afterparty, believe me that you get really sleepy after ice swimming, sauna and a meal. The beers after that will render anybody quite brain dead, honest =)<br />
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Good people were met and fun was had. We had a chance to check out camp hastur mk3, this apartment in Oulu we'll be using in the next few months to finish Hoodownr. So besides coding and things there's also the moving thing to do and the moving day is this coming friday. Besides the computers and things we won't be taking much stuff along, just the shisha, our trusty record player and a bunch of vinyls for some serious after-coding relaxation sessions.<br />
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So the majority of team Hoodownr is heading to Oulu now. If you happen to be around, pop by for a cup of coffee or meet us at Kulttuuribingo sometime!<br />
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Hope to meet you all in Oulu!<br />
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Sami<br />
Hastur<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-22415358938019643082014-01-16T13:18:00.001-08:002014-01-16T13:21:26.885-08:00the london perambulatorSometimes along the way, a person needs to stop and ask himself: What is thy quest? Hmm!<br />
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Last summer we defined our quest to be the quest of helping discovery. Meaningless ad blurb in less than 64 characters found at our website: 'We bring discovery into your lives'. What kind of discovery is there to be done walking there on the streets with a mobile phone in your pocket?<br />
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Some people do it even without a phone. I was well inspired this little documentary about the London Perambulator, Mr Nick Papadimitriou. Essentially he's this bloke who walks around and turns everyday things into a sort of poetry. If you haven't watched the clip before, do yourself a favor and watch it.<br />
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So Mr Nick is described to be 'a mystic who hoovers out magic out of stone and brick'. Another fitting quote: 'He is an eccentric, there's no doubt about it'.<br />
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What impressed me personally was Mr Nick's way of immersing himself into the surroundings on his walks. Maybe experiencing things was like that when one is a child. Magical and mystical. Makes me think that as adults, our minds become very fixed and analytic to our own detriment. The magic is almost lost and it only remains in our dreams. Mr Nick seems to be in an altered state of consciousness on his little walks, hence he is an eccentric?<br />
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I believe that we all experience altered states of consciousness just like Mr Nick. Reading a book or playing a game transcends our everyday thoughts to somewhere magical. We're entertained and exhilarated. Why not try and find an altered state of mind on your walking trips?<br />
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I think our fixed attitudes about life and things, being adults and everything being such serious business, stifle us from seeing the magic that still exist there if we took the time to see it. There's a ton of sports tracking apps for mobile devices with various calorie counters and things that measure our performance. Our society has become obsessed with performance and I don't believe I'm wrong if I say that we have bought the idea of judging all our actions by performance. Even casual exercise needs to be justified and measured. Why?<br />
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For Hoodownr I wanted a diametrically opposite approach to all that performance measuring. Sure, the game mechanism monitors your steps and shows your progress and there are leaderboards to climb if you want to. But I sincerely hope that people would find the magic and wonder of their surroundings and the people there thru our game. This I feel is our biggest challenge with Hoodownr, to fuse a easy entry concept (taking over hoods) and a more deeper concept of psychogeography or deep topography or whatever you wish to call it.<br />
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After a lot of playtesting I believe we've got the right formula for just that. Still a lot of things to do and think about tho. It's very hard to explain the game experience to people that have never played it before. It's like explaining role-playing: you have to do it yourself to understand the fun.<br />
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In the next few weeks we'll be able to do a bit of testing again with the new build. I'm very keen to hear what our test subjects have to say. =)<br />
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More stuff happening soon, great things to look forward to so please keep on following the blog, I promise you won't turn into complete nut job perambulating aimlessly somewhere (fingers crossed).<br />
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Sami<br />
Hastur<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-90703262487121291022014-01-09T01:17:00.003-08:002014-01-09T01:37:10.458-08:00The new gospel<div class="p1">
Hello all and here's a small project update: coding, coding, coding..</div>
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Didn't quite reach our goal for a playable beta for the new years but we're almost there. And there's a bit of news too, we're moving our operation to Oulu at the end of the month to continue working on Hoodownr. After 6 months in Tornio, we fully discovered the boredomness of having to drive 130km to a meeting every time and decided that Moses has to move towards the mountain when the opposite is not happening.</div>
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Speaking of religious terminology here's one thing I spotted on play Finland the other day. Apparently Unity is touring Finland trying to lure more people in to use their platform. I talked to a few Unity people a few months ago, the guys are really great and have a great product of course and I cannot really think of any reason to not to go Unity if you're publishing for multiple platforms.</div>
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The choice of words on the Unity tour promotion bothered me a bit tho. It looks like us lucky lucky Finns are in for a big experience as the '<i>guru Andy Touch, EMEA Product Evangelist at Unity Technologies</i>' is flying all the way from X to preach the gospel of easy multi-platform game publishing. He's going to tell us all about the mindblowing, even Revolutionary new ways to change our lives as game developers. Bliss!</div>
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I really don't know why they would use religious terminology to assess the expertise of this mister Touch. If you really think about it, it's not that far from the business card of <a href="http://gothamist.com/2014/01/08/chinese_zillionaire_who_wants_to_bu.php" target="_blank">Mr Guangbiao Chen</a> who basically states that he is the god-king of the universe. Take a look at the article for kicks. I actually love his approach with blatant self promotion, at least he's being honest about how he feels about himself.</div>
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Us westerners of course are much more civilized (read: sneaky) and do the same thing in a much more roundabout way. But why borrow American TV-evangelist jargon to make the same point? Maybe it's just me but the connotation feels very awkward: 'DIAL 777-GOD <b>now</b> to make a contribution'. Who buys that shit? Sofware engineers? Maybe there is a little buddha inside all of us!</div>
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So we're expecting a guru AND an evangelist all rolled into one coming over. I see an image of a mysterious man from faraway lands who comes (possibly riding a camel?) with his begging bowl and helps his converts to make their own begging bowls. 'Why give a man a fish when you could sell him some shit to help him to sell some shit' is the new gospel for the modern age. And happy we are of all the modern things.</div>
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I myself would better enjoy Mr Chen's gospel. At least he starts his press conferences with a song and I believe there's something honest about a man singing.</div>
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If you're reading this Mr Chen, please come over, let's get blind drunk in Oulu and while we're at it, try and communicate our great achievements to the public. Hell, I'll even set you up with a proper gig somewhere (please google '<a href="http://www.ykanpub.com/blog/" target="_blank">Ykän Pub</a>', a very promising and accepting venue), let's blow some wannabe guru evangelists out of the water. </div>
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End of terminology rant. Enjoy 2014, boys and girls!</div>
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Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-55450957481913669422013-12-24T04:46:00.001-08:002013-12-24T04:53:40.284-08:00the year that was (the valley of death)So it's the end of 2013 and what a year it was! Coding, designing, fixing, swearing, coffee, beer and wine and hard liquor, pulling hair out of our heads and hacking phones and things. Ten months of development and things behind, whew! I thought of whipping up a blogpost about this year, some things that remain with me, the rantings of a hippie indie developer in the backwoods of Finland.<br />
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Phase one:<br />
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I spent most of the year 2012 coding a collectible card game called Zombiary. Took it to a playable stage last christmas with AI and everything. No graphics or design, just basic html coloured squares and text. But you could play the game. Felt quite burned out with the project in January and it seemed we couldn't get graphics for it at all. There are 88 cards in the basic deck and one graphic artist after another failed us. In hindsight, our expectations were quite high for an indie game, we couldn't accept the kind of stuff that is the norm on CCG's that you can play on kongregate or so, we wanted a gritty pulp horror style line drawn look and it just didn't play out at all. So in Jan, I decided to put Zombiary on hold, booked tickets to fly to Kobe to paint, hang around rock n' roll venues and see what happens.<br />
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In Kobe, I met an old coder friend Lukasz who worked together with me when we were doing Four Letter Words for iOS. After the staggering non-success of 4LW Lukasz had to get what one might call a real job (one of those things we all know and love, make crappy nonsense for an insurance company and stuff) that produces a paycheck at the end of the month and stomach ulcers after a year of that.<br />
Luke told me that he's working on a car navigation software project and has acquired good knowledge in GPS related things. Immediately I thought of this little idea we'd been toying with, a GPS based game for mobile. Lukasz was interested to jump in and hack around a bit and in a few weeks we had a proto of 'the new game'.<br />
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I quite enjoyed the springtime, prepared for my art show, it was really great to just paint and hang around after a winter of endless days and nights of coding. We got a nice venue and did a shared exhibition with a proper painter, Naoko Ogasawara. I went out to the mountains of Kobe and into the city with the proto of Hoodownr, met interesting people and heard interesting things. And learned a lot about gps error spikes and things. =)<br />
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After a few months, it was time to head back to Finland. We cooked up a 'Nightspot at Zubb Um Kabir' event with a few great bands in Kobe at this joint that had broken air conditioning. Man it was hot but all of our friends came and played and we even had poetry reading backed up by a world class jazz pianist making funny sounds from a two-penny plastic keyboard. Total artistic success! Packed my bags to head back to Finland, the land of promise.<br />
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Second phase:<br />
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Doing my thing in Japan for a long time, Finland felt very attractive place to move on with a project. The government is putting money to games development and encouraging small businesses to grow. Instead of the usual thing of going around finding investment, I was under the impression that the government is helping small companies thru the valley of death to make a proto or something to move on with. So I got talking to Tekes, keksintösäätiö, Finnvera and so on and so forth.<br />
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It turned out that they only want to help companies that already have a funding or capital of their own. So if you spent the last 10 years of your life abroad, didn't come back with a bunch of money, the govt is not interested to help you at all. I wasted a lot of time with all of aforementioned institutions, having meaningless conversations without nothing moving on. After a lot of wheeling and dealing, I was accepted as a private enterpreneur (co-op's are a swearword in Finland) to get a bit of money to live and try to find funding that would allow to try Tekes etc. again.<br />
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After paying the enterpreneur insurances and things the law requires from a private enterpreneur, you are left with less money than the guy who gets his welfare check every month. It would definitely be better to lie to the government at the end of every month that you are unemployed and keep doing what you're doing. Lesson 1 for indie devs: if you haven't got the capital, lie, fabricate, cheat. That's what everybody else is doing.<br />
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I think the problem with the starttiraha (small business encouragement package) is that they came up with that kind of arrangement at the time when the only businesses were inns, hairdressing salons and restaurants. Stuff that immediately creates cash flow. So starttiraha is there to help you to build your business that is already creating money. With a project like ours, that is not the case of course. There is no revenue until the game is finished and selling like hotcakes.<br />
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Thru the summer we kept coding and talking about the game. Assembly 2013 had a contest for a free presentation booth for the best project at play Finland (Finnish gamedev group on facebook). We got the booth and went there. We made friends and in general people loved what we were doing. Basim flew in from England to see the crowd and discuss the project. Bazzer is well into the new things in the gaming industry and knows what is going on, he told us that what we are doing is exactly the kind of thing that is the future of gaming. Well encouraged there.<br />
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The rest of the summer was more coding and running the first iteration of Camp Hastur. The camp was a very welcome distraction, getting to meet and talk to a number of people, youth workers, sculptors, tattoo artists, actors, people from all walks of life. We arranged Hasturock vol 2, a warehouse rock festivus in this abandoned building on the outskirts of Tornio and had a hell of a time doing it.<br />
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Autumn came, our game was selected on the top ten of SITRA's health game compo, Gesundheit. We got to participate at Wärkfest, present a demo of the game to the public, join a workshop and all that jazz. The response to Hoodownr was great. I asked sitra to write us a recommendation letter that would help us to move on with the funding. They said no. Lesson 2 for an indie dev: Nobody will stick out his head for you. It's completely up to you man.<br />
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Sitra helped us to get a discount on Slush 2013 tickets though. In we went, obsessively coding to present a playable demo that showed all those things people from the previous tests wanted to see. Time ran out however and we decided not to show a buggy build at all. At slush, we talked to a number of people who were interested in the project. The very first person we met told us basically that being a Co-op is spooky communist hippie shit. Gotta be incorporated. Lesson 3: Don't go about as a co-op. You will be immediately tagged as suspicious communist hippie bums. Sharing is not caring. All the guys with big dicks have the word LLC tattooed on those dicks. Get your tat today.<br />
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I think the best part of Slush for us was the shadow event, Sludge. It was arranged at this old insane asylum building by people who really cared about games more than CPR's and business jargon. Those boys had something going there, if they keep doing it, it's going to be what Boozembly is to Assembly. More power to Sludge! Great DJ's too =)<br />
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Thinking about it after 10 months of developing and promoting and dealing with all these people I felt that the way to do it is to do it yourself completely. The investors that could seriously contribute to your project want to see the finished game and revenue. It's no different from the shark tank. Some want to scam you for a very small amount of money. Lesson number 4: Don't take it. Money is just money, those guys are just as desperate to find something to invest in as you are to make your game. The deal has to make sense. Give in and you will be seriously fucked later. I mean seriously seriously fucked. If you fuck up with your funding deals early on, getting additional funding later will be almost impossible. This actually happens.<br />
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So as a small summa summarum after 10 months: Do it yourself if you can. Even when you cannot, do it anyway. Make it possible. Make friends with your players, make the game fun for them and listen to their feedback. I mean seriously listen. If you are producing the game, listen to your team. Your team is the best thing you've got. Be a person. Exert energy. Have passion. Be open to ideas and influences and the energy of people who are different from you. The game you are making is for the people, not for you or for a corporate machine. Stand by your true values. Your standing or falling depends fully on the connection between your game and the people who play it. That is all.<br />
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So at the end of the year, we are at a place where we almost have a fully playable beta. We intend to field test the game and make improvements based on player feedback. Can't wait to hit the road with a bunch of friends with the latest build of Hoodownr to see how it plays and how people will feel. Come 2014, come more kick-ass things from us.<br />
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Thanks for following our blog everybody. Hope you've enjoyed, hope to see everybody next year, happy holidays and all that!<br />
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keep reaching up!<br />
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Sami<br />
Hastur<br />
<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-62517846396425701332013-12-16T07:01:00.001-08:002013-12-16T07:01:11.253-08:00Coding Hello!The past two weeks have gone by in a flash of coding. That's what game programmers do I guess. Code.<br />
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We set to build a playable build of Hoodo after Slush. People we met there were only interested to see the finished game and player feedback and stuff before they would discuss any funding. Now That is really helpful. Rule number one, please have a hit game that is making lotsa greenback, then you'll get funded. Right on!<br />
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We've had a few alphas for testers this year but the complaint has been the same, unless you actually get to play the game, it's hard to understand what it's all about. Mission: complete the game!<br />
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Under the hood, Hoodownr poses a few technically difficult problems. Unlike a mmorpg where you shard and instance groups of players, we don't shard and most certainly don't instance. Everybody who plays the game plays on the same global map. All 10 million of them. Or more. This is where things get a bit tricky.<br />
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I've been hacking away on the server side to make the magic happen. The existing code had to be completely rewritten and tested for all kinds of deadly situations that might arise. And on a game like ours, lot's of stuff will arise.<br />
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After a few weeks of hard work, everything looks pretty much the same as it did 2 months ago. Well there's the new player status and achievement screens but beside that, things look very alpha. Most discouraging but adding eye candy is the easiest thing.<br />
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There's a few bits and pieces still missing but it's close to playable now. We plan to have a few group tests with our friends who are getting new handsets for christmas and see how they feel about the Hoodownr experience.<br />
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Still an insane amount of stuff on the bucket list but things do get done one by one. Bugs fixed, issues resolved. Things are moving along.<br />
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Looks like the blog entry turned into a progress review and nothing interesting. Hmm. Maybe because it's about the work that goes into a game. Can get very tedious at times but that's how she goes.<br />
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One fun thing to write is: Parallella is almost ready. <a href="http://www.parallella.org/" target="_blank">Take a look</a>. They will be shipping boards in the next few days, can't wait to get mine!<br />
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Your boringly and uninspiringly and workingly<br />
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Sami<br />
Hastur<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-11076905443386435172013-12-09T02:46:00.001-08:002013-12-09T03:08:48.877-08:00exploring cityscapeLet's kick off with a quote from a Rush song called 'the Analog Kid':<br />
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<i>'You move me, you move me</i><br />
<i>with your buildings and your eyes</i><br />
<i>Autumn woods and winter skies</i><br />
<i>You move me, you move me</i><br />
<i>Open sea and city lights</i><br />
<i>Busy streets and dizzy heights</i><br />
<i>You call me, you call me'</i><br />
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So what I want to talk right now is how we experience the city. I would think most of us are or have lived or travelled in a City. New York, Paris, Los Angeles, London, La Paz,Osaka.. all these vibrant and exciting places where it's all happening.<br />
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Or is it? One can have a very boring old time even in the coolest place of the world. When you live and work in a metropolis, the places you go to work and play easily become a repetition. One acknowledges the possibilities of a metropolis, all it's venues, hiking trails and millions of people but still feels stuck.<br />
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When traveling to a city, you might be stuck with a tourist group or if going solo, going from one attraction to another can become very daunting.<br />
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I think the problem lies in the way we look at the city. We sort of know what it is. Like a big machine made of sewage drains and bus routes, all those people spinning there trying to run the economics and chase their dreams. Everything in the city is built around and by the people and their dreams. And as people and their dreams are individual, so are the cities and the suburbs and train yards and everything in them.<br />
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I've been living in a few cities in Japan and Korea, visited a few in Europe and the states too. I had the luxury of time to stay for a few months at a time, sometimes years, and try and experience the place that I was in.<br />
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After spending a while in a place, you've found a few people you meet occasionally or frequently and a few places you hang out occasionally or frequently. Doing what you did when you arrived, that is, exploring new venues and things, sort of fizzles out. Going to new places becomes harder and more bothersome. You land at the spot where you are aware of the possibilities but still sort of stuck. Congratulations, you have landed at your comfort zone. Are we really comfortable now?<br />
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Breaking this mold you cast for yourself is one of our key motivations with <a href="http://www.hoodownr.com/" target="_blank">Hoodownr</a>. We need incentives to go out of our comfort zones and we need to be awarded for doing that. Everybody wants to see more and feel more. I don't think I'm wrong if I say that people, you, me, the man next door, are just waiting for the right cue.<br />
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Also we easily become stuck in our social circles. Cues do come from our own circle of friends in the form of trips to the countryside or to an art show but those cues might not come as frequently as we would like them. Hanging out with exactly the same crowd becomes daunting after a while, same faces, same conversations, similar things. Oh if only there was an external wake up and and adventure to boot.<br />
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Hoodownr strives to offer an external and casual cue. For yourself and for other people who are playing the game. Adventure can be a tap away after starting the app. Starting off solo and having other people on board while you're exploring happens. When you feel you are in a rut: start hoodownr, just hit play, take a bottle of water with you and head out the door. Take a camera with you. It's all out there for you. Discovery now!<br />
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'<i>the focus is sharp in the city</i>'.<br />
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Sami<br />
Hastur<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-23720048411582770172013-12-02T03:21:00.000-08:002013-12-02T03:21:08.423-08:00Stig BombingMore strange news from the convoluted world of Osuuskunta Hastur.<br />
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A few weeks back, we took part in arranging the unveiling of 'the Broken Lantern', a 8 meter tall stainless steel sculpture in the heart of Tornio city. The artists, Teija and Pekka Isorättyä have been hanging around at the camp every now and then and great times were had (evidence further down on older blog entries).<br />
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The town of Tornio paid for the costs of the sculpture that celebrates the towns village idiots and HC punk scene. For some reason or other, the town was not interested in creating any kind of unveiling event or artist reception so all us bright minds at Camp Hastur got together and planned and executed an opening ceremony and the reception.<br />
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Pia and Merja created the concept that included an opera singer, fire art, lights and performance activity. Teija and Pekka asked one of our friends, Miku (of the assembly 2013 rainbow rug booth hangout support fame) to have the opening speech. Usually someone from the town council has a very boring speech in such occasions but this time around is was our friend who got a bit of limelight. We'll he's in the town council too so it was all legit. =)<br />
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As we came back after slush, I got the news that the reception budget had been axed in the council. WTF! If a pro cross-country skier of equal magnitude made his return to the old home town, they'd probably send a limo and have a big party. But for artists, no matter how famous, the town didn'd want to spend a penny. Classic. We felt that this was quite outrageous and decided to arrange the reception ourselves. After all, the statue is about independent culture. I had 2 days to arrange the reception without any money, lights, PA..<br />
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With a little help from a friend here and there, we got the keys to and old bank building very near the statue, Miku arranged us a projector and a small PA set and Pia bought heaps of bubbly out of her own pocket. Arranging a party for 50-100 people in two day's notice is not easy I tell you. Especially if you want to throw a classy party. But we pulled it off, miraculously.<br />
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The opening went well, the party was groovy and the afterparty even groovier maybe =)<br /><br />Next day me and Janne crawled to the art museum bazaar to meet up with artists who might have interest in doing an art show at camp Hastur. We met a few people and then there was this <a href="http://stigolavtony.com/" target="_blank">Mr. Stig</a> who had some really cool graffiti style paintings. He told us we was not interested at all to come to this god-forsaken town but some of his friends basically forced him to pack his paintings and drive to Tornio.<br />
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Long story short, we are planning an art show with Stig PLUS he's doing some kick-o-ass-o graphics for Hoodownr! I'm posting a few samples of his stuff here, take a look. If you need a airplane hangar painted in vivid colors or something like that, contact stig, he's da man for da job!<br /><br />This week it's still grinding away with hoodo pre beta. So much to do. More blogging later.<br /><br />Ah btw we got the hoodownr specific website up at <a href="http://hoodownr.com/">hoodownr.com</a> , take a look!<br />
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Appreciate your local artist people!<br />
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Sami<br />
Hastur<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-31514694416388689692013-11-28T01:27:00.000-08:002013-11-28T01:30:17.823-08:00gaming or gaming?Here's an interesting tidbit I read a few days ago. I'm quoting the text in full from <a href="http://a-hackers-craic.blogspot.fi/" target="_blank">Notzed's</a> blog here:<br />
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Is it gaming or gaming?</div>
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The other big thing to come to light is the attempt to push the revenue model up significantly higher than the selling-disks model will ever be able to provide.</div>
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Here in Australia 'gaming' generally refers not to computer games, but to the computerised gambling industry. An awful lot about the intended revenue models (and mobile/tablet 'free to play games' in general) share a lot with this despicable industry which prays on people psychologically to fleece them of their cash. Even the words being thrown around like 'whales' come from directly that industry.</div>
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And gaming is big money compared to the computer game industry.</div>
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Unfortunately it seems 'computer games' are going to be headed at least in some part toward this gambling revenue model; anywhere there is this much money to be had it will be sought out actively. Companies that don't embrace it will be fighting for the scraps but hopefully they'll be able to survive and hopefully this is just a passing fad (or gets regulated out of the market).</div>
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This suddenly made a lot of sense to me. This past autumn I have followed the game industry events in europe, especially the UK. The trend seems to be that the gambling industry is developing ties with computer game companies. I wondered why those loathsome fuckers are accepted in the gaming events at all but now it's pretty obvious really. The mechanisms of gambling seem to be infiltrating the proper games industry as well.<br />
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Cannot say i'm really looking forward to a more complete amalgamation of gambling and gaming. I think that conditioning people to be more accepting towards an industry who's line of business is of basically ripping people off and creating an impression of 'It could be you!'. And the house always wins. What's next, gambling Mario now with crackwhores for kids?<br />
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The pay-to-win models work tho. And as a game producer I could reason that we're only supplying a demand. Just like your local meth dealer does. Supply and demand, It's business baby!<br />
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I wonder how much the expectation of multi-billion exits affects us startups. If you don't proclaim intentions of making a huge amount of revenue, you are not going to get funded. I think Notzed's observation about companies who are not comfortable with heroin-dealer tactics of ripping people off are accurate. You are left to fight for the scraps.<br />
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Our vision is not of pay-to-win or endless IAP's to keep up. The point of Hoodownr is to bring people together. Once purchased, it's yours to enjoy forever. There will be no ads for the most lucrative fields of ad revenue, gambling and pornography. In fact, there will be no ads at all. We feel people get bombed with enough advertisement propaganda already.<br />
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In the current state of affairs, I think this is the only sensible way for us and our players. If you're a die hard F2P proponent, think again. Think of all the ad crap that you've been force fed and the gambling-derived business models behind the attractive package. Time to uninstall some software guys.<br />
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Sami<br />
Hastur<br />
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Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-15275626963167098732013-11-19T03:27:00.000-08:002013-11-19T03:27:14.821-08:00we got slushed!A few notes about our Slush experience here.. totally tired after the three day trial..<br />
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So as usual, when there's an tradeshow or something happening, we hit the high gear with development. This time our goal was to get a gameplay demo of hoodo with most of the key features in. The features we had shown on the video but that we're not ready yet. And what a big piece of the cake it was. Totally burned out with all the development hell and testing, we were really burning the midnight oil for the current build.<br />
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Slush organization was really good, they provided a steady stream of emails with hints about how to connect with investors and the like. Studying investor profiles and learning about the investors hobbies and stuff was encouraged. Big plus for all that info so everybody could find the maximum benefit.<br />
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We are a small team so instead of studying loads of profiles and things we just skimmed thru the material and looked up people who were doing or funding interesting things. And worked on the build of course. At the venue, Z went to talk to the accelerators and small investor players. We registered late so there was no opportunity to pitch in front of an audience so I just did a lot of cold pitching to interesting people I met wherever. That approach worked out fine and I had a few very nice conversations with people high up the ladder.<br />
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Another thing that we noticed once again was the 'show me the playable demo'-thing. Startups and other future game devs, nobody is going to care about your video, be prepared to show your progress thru the demo. We had the party build ready online and prepared to give the link via qr-code and an nfc tag. Tap your phone to the tag, get the build, wham bang thank you mam. I saw nobody else having anything like that. NFC rocks!<br />
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All in all the venue was really chaotic and I found it hard to concentrate on the presentations. So many projects and companies all pitching on stage. I felt our direct approach was really good for us for making contacts.<br />
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So now there's a lot of following up to be done. We went thru all the business cards and things and made a plan of what to do next. The push for slush was a big step for the game, we've pretty much got all the basic elements of Hoodownr in place for further playetesting. It was really hard work but very encouraging to see how far we got in a very limited amount of time. Still a few bugs and additional features to throw in, I can see the rest of the year flying by really fast.<br /><br />Well, it's time to get back to the old grindstone. Thanks all who we met and helped along the way - stäy tuned!<br /><br /><br />Sami<br />Hastur<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03476094353747984002noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4087149391784947816.post-81671447467209753532013-11-08T01:34:00.003-08:002013-11-08T01:38:41.769-08:00Under the hoodBusy busy bees here hacking away with Hoodownr codebase. We're preparing a build for next weeks <a href="http://slush.fi/" target="_blank">Slush 2013</a>, tech company and investor meetup.<br />
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The slush build will have most of those fun things our playtesters during assembly2013 and wärkfest asked to have to grok what the game is about. We've also improved the build deployment process so installing it is easier than ever. This time around things should be really straightforward for testers.<br />
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On the backend side, we've been botbuilding and discovering all kinds of neat things we can do with the game. Neat things like making it easier and more intuitive. People who have seen the game already were surprised how easy it is to play. Newsflash: It just got even easier.<br />
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The backend work also contributes to a good few gameplay elements we're going to incorporate in Hoodownr. It's fun to see the project evolve.<br />
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Last night's build didn't work on Froyo anymore due to google policy. What followed was a mad rush to a local theatre production company unofficial headquarters to get the DOCOMO galaxy mk1 (a.k.a the shitphone) properly cracked and reflashed. Where else would you have your phone hacked?<br />
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After a few hours of Z and Jonttu trying to break the devices Japanese carrier-locked backbone and me and Merja talking about the situation with play rehearsal spaces here in Tornio, the phone finally yielded and runs Gingerbread now. And the latest build of Hoodownr.<br />
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Jonttu was wondering why we would support an old piece of crap like Gingerbread. The answer is obvious of course but it made me remember our four letter words project a few years ago on IOS. The game has a heavy self-organizing cell algo and we decided it should run on iPod mark 1. The algo was heavy even on a current iPod at the time but Dr Lukasz's madskills came into rescue and sure enough, the release is perfectly playable even on that iPod that looks like an early proto of a touch-screen device. If that's not a win I don't know what is.<br />
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Professionalism is the thing that is not immediately apparent goes the old Finnish saying. We want to show you more.<br />
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A beautiful snowy day in Northern Finland. After a cup of coffee, I'm going out to do a run with the latest build. Forgetting about testing while you're testing means you're doing something right.And that's the plan!<br />
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See you at Slush<br />
Sami<br />
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