Cynical Confessions
You are so very right... Never really looked down there before, so I blindly assumed they were for the page I was was currently on...Jen wrote:Bafitis wrote:Am I the only one to find it strange that over 260K people LIKE the Fedora Kickstarter, yet we only have just over 2,700 Backers... If each of those 261K people who Like the Kickstarter would just donate a buck we'd be over the Goal... Shame people have no problem liking something, but when it comes to taking action, we end up with just ONE Percent...
Though we do still have over 3 weeks to go, so maybe some of those people are just waiting for their next paycheck or something... Here's Hoping... *raises glass*
Those 261k likes aren't for Tex, they are for Kickstarter in general.
Still, it would be nice to get those 260K on our side, would it not???
The Paved Straight Road, Won't Always Get You Farther Than The Winding Dirt Road...
Can You Run Your Game??? Click Here And Find Out...
*Note, Not All Games Have Been Tested & Therefore May Not Be Listed...
Can You Run Your Game??? Click Here And Find Out...
*Note, Not All Games Have Been Tested & Therefore May Not Be Listed...
if project fedora doesn't get funded there's seriously something forking wrong with Kickstarter.. and for that matter GAMERS..
The biggest annoyance is the locking out of any press. They just won't cover it for some stupid reason (too busy playing their inferior Diablo 3 to care- inferior in that Blizzard totally fucked it up).
I can only hope that Chris and Aaron have some major PR card up their sleeves that they haven't played yet.
The biggest annoyance is the locking out of any press. They just won't cover it for some stupid reason (too busy playing their inferior Diablo 3 to care- inferior in that Blizzard totally fucked it up).
I can only hope that Chris and Aaron have some major PR card up their sleeves that they haven't played yet.
The trouble with Fedora is that it looks like a sophisticated, involved game. When compared to the other games that are effortlessly getting funded, it's generally because they're the instant gratification games that you can pick up, learn and put down at any time. For better or worse, Fedora brilliantly promotes itself as something more intricate than the average action or arcade game that seems to be the flavour of the current era. It's simply a case of gamers voting with their dollar. I've always been hot and cold when it comes to democracy.
