Accesso anticipato “corre un grande rischio,” dice lo sviluppatore solista di City Builder: “Ci sono aspettative, ed è meglio che tu mantenga le aspettative”
The solo indie developer behind city builder Bulwark Evolution: Falconeer Chronicles has been discussing the pros and cons of releasing a game in early access, and he believes it “corre un grande rischio,” especially for smaller developers.
Il mese scorso, Tomas Sala released an update for his city builder that was so big, he changed the game’s name, despite it being just six months from its initial, full launch. Al momento, he said in a statement that “it’d be a disaster” for him to run an early access campaign, which I was curious to ask him about in a recent interview.
Sala explains that going into early access means you’re facing “as rigid a development as you [può] get.” He says: “Sai, you made some promises, and then you have to deliver on those exact promises. Se non lo fai, people feel let down because they already paid money.”
Continuing, Sala notes that “if you do [early access], it’s fantastic” since it comes with advantages like “great feedback,” ma alla fine, it’s still risky. “If you’re really small and you’re not, you know, thriving on your community in a proper sense, then it becomes a stranglehold.” He points to indies that have been criticized for “not being able to deliver on the hype, or taking too long” as examples of this. “When you sign up for a format, there are expectations, ed è meglio che tu mantenga le aspettative,” Aggiunge.
Sala tells GamesRadar+ he thinks game development works better for him without the structure that’d be enforced by early access. piuttosto che questo, he feels freer to release new updates, and take “a month of just fucking around” a “make this cool thing,” and his community is supportive of that. That “authentic relationship” with the community is important, Sala says – so much so that he thinks it’s “the one thing indies have that giant corporations can’t deliver.”