• Aatube
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    89 months ago

    dot com was regarded as a bubble and seem to have the same amount of sustainability as indie games: good ones are good and bad ones are bad

    • ampersandrew
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      429 months ago

      Dot com was a bubble because you could call your company anything with a “dot com” on the end and get funding for it without a business strategy. Indie games never got that treatment.

      • Aatube
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        9 months ago

        Well I guess because you can’t really invest… even without funding you have tons of un strategy on indiegala

        • @Kichae@lemmy.ca
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          159 months ago

          And without the investment angle, there’s no bubble.

          A bubble isn’t “they’re really popular right now, and there’s a whole bunch of them popping up”. That’s a fad. A trend.

          A bubble is always in reference to investments. It’s a pump-and-dump scheme at the level of the whole economy. The housing bubble isn’t because there’s a glut of houses on the market, it’s because people are trying to market houses as an investment opportunity for market squatters and landlords.

          • Aatube
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            19 months ago

            Yeah, I’m just saying that I don’t understand the sustainability argument

    • @gk99@beehaw.org
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      39 months ago

      And yet some of my favorite indie games are games practically nobody’s ever heard of. Most recent was Metal Unit, a game that I don’t know how I have in my Steam library and somehow evades the internet’s favorite rule despite the main character being an anime girl in a bodysuit. At time of writing there are 17 players in-game.

      So while good games are good and bad games are bad, the good ones may not necessarily be sustainable.