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KickStarter Geneforge 1 - Mutagen - remake from Spiderweb Software

Falkner

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Wasteland 2
I've lived without AV software for all of my PC life, since late 90s. In those 25 years, I got a virus exactly once. Just basic browsing hygiene.
I'm looking through your system files right now and can confirm this.
 

Bad Sector

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Insert Title Here RPG Wokedex Codex Year of the Donut Codex+ Now Streaming! Steve gets a Kidney but I don't even get a tag.
I've lived without AV software for all of my PC life, since late 90s. In those 25 years, I got a virus exactly once. Just basic browsing hygiene.

Unless you switched to Linux you are using AV software in Windows via Windows Defender - which is an antivirus and actually better than a lot of the crap out there (that makes sense, Microsoft has a vested interest in keeping Windows free of malware and doesn't need to sell you any bloated AV that constantly needs to justify its existence).
 

V_K

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I've lived without AV software for all of my PC life, since late 90s. In those 25 years, I got a virus exactly once. Just basic browsing hygiene.

Unless you switched to Linux you are using AV software in Windows via Windows Defender - which is an antivirus and actually better than a lot of the crap out there (that makes sense, Microsoft has a vested interest in keeping Windows free of malware and doesn't need to sell you any bloated AV that constantly needs to justify its existence).
Since I'm on Win 10 - that is, for the past 2 years - sure. On my previous Win7 PC, I actually disabled it because it tended to be overzealous.
 

coldcrow

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Except you are are really keen on executing dubious stuff, you can disable Defender, too. 99,9% of infections are a result of executing dubious files. Once you get into a habit of scanning your dl'ed crap manually, and even better, stop executing said dubious files, the whole concept of AV programs seems futile.
 

Rafidur

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- A host of typo fixes and minor tweaks.
- A number of exploits have been fixed. Sorry!
- Endurance is now cheaper and gives you more health at higher levels.
- Dante’s Guile now helps with operating more sorts of machinery.
- Some early Leadership checks are easier.
- More Leadership checks give experience.
- Glaahk stings now do magical damage.
- Changing sound volume in Settings has clearer results.
- Errors in some endings have been corrected.
- Battle Betas you create are now a little stronger.
- Background sounds are slightly louder.

Betas went from a slight hp boost to a large hp boost and a tiny damage boost. Not so beta anymore, eh? Their abilities are still 100% copy pasted from alphas, though.
 
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Infinitron

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Codex Year of the Donut Serpent in the Staglands Dead State Divinity: Original Sin Project: Eternity Torment: Tides of Numenera Wasteland 2 Shadorwun: Hong Kong Divinity: Original Sin 2 A Beautifully Desolate Campaign Pillars of Eternity 2: Deadfire Pathfinder: Kingmaker Pathfinder: Wrath I'm very into cock and ball torture I helped put crap in Monomyth
https://turnbasedlovers.com/review/geneforge-1-mutagen/

Geneforge 1 – Mutagen Review
Nearly 20 years after the release of Geneforge 1 to Macs, Jeff Vogel has done a bit of gene-forging himself and rewritten all the little scrolls that made up that CRPG classic. Updated for contemporary machines and audiences, Geneforge 1 – Mutagen is a remaster of the first game in the Geneforge series, bringing in new mechanics, new stories, and high-resolution graphics.

Geneforge_Mutagen_ptTs9DmJ7Q-1.jpg

In Mutagen you play a “Shaper,” a member of the controlling sociopolitical class whose might is predicated on their ability to create life from a magical-organic substance called Essence.

Having been sent out on your first mission as an apprentice, you are shipwrecked on a restricted island after a foreign vessel shoots down your living boat. Quickly after arriving, you discover a series of canisters of goop with syringe-like needles on top – and using them to inject yourself grants you magical power far beyond what you had access to back on the mainland.

Newly juiced and ready to party, your tasks are three-fold: discover why Sucia Island was restricted (or “Barred” in Shaper-speak), find out who shot your ship and what they want from you, and figure out what’s going on with the three sects of Serviles who have been living on the island since Sucia was abandoned.

The Serviles are a species of humanoids that Shapers created as a slave class. In the player character’s experience, Serviles back on the mainland of Terrestia are dumb instruction-followers, speaking mangled English and being told what to think. But on Sucia Island, one soon finds that the Serviles are speaking in full sentences. Not only are they speaking in full sentences, but they’ve been developing philosophy in the two hundred years since a Shaper has landed on Sucia, and some of them aren’t too excited about the idea of being reintegrated into a society that thinks of them as little more than flesh robots.

As mentioned above, the Serviles aren’t all of one mind about how they should deal with Shapers. They’ve fractured over time into the Awakened, who would like to be equals with Shapers and Common folk; the Obeyers, who are content to go back to the way things have always been under Shaper rule; and the Takers, who are quite upset and would really very much like to kill any Shaper they see, and be left to their own devices.

Geneforge_Mutagen_51CU2Hg9RY.jpg

To this end, the Takers have allied themselves with the Sholai, a group of explorers from some distant land who have landed on Sucia. They’re humans, and they have also discovered the canisters full of magical goop – and they’re getting powers. Powers like yours, powers that are supposed to be reserved for the Shapers. Their leader, Trajkov, has sealed himself away in a chamber in a mountain containing a powerful Shaper tool – if you’re going to get to him, you’ll have to get stronger.

You don’t necessarily need to get physically stronger, though (or magically, I guess). Geneforge is adamant about letting you achieve one of several endings without ever shooting a fireball, much less even making a creature to aid you in battle. By upgrading your Leadership and Mechanics stats, you can unlock new dialogue options or bypass mechanical obstacles, allowing you access to parts of the world through routes other than fighting.

The likely version is you’ll end up using a combination of all three tactics to make your path across the island. The overworld of Geneforge is made of interconnected area maps, and exploration is largely non-linear. In keeping with the older era of CRPG games, the game opens up really dangerous areas to you very early in the experience. It’s up to the player to realize that they aren’t going to be able to truck through the wastelands or get shot by ghosts for very long until they level up elsewhere on the island. Much of the western part of the map where you start the game is in fact incredibly high-level, and the vast expanse of initially-unexplorable land provides a lot of mystery as you chart the rest of the world.

Geneforge_Mutagen_wfyGL907qj.jpg

Like G1, Mutagen has real-time map exploration, with an immediate switch into on-map turn-based combat. In Mutagen, each unit gets 8 Action Points per round, to be used either to move, attack, or use special abilities. G1 had the same Action Point system, but it didn’t show you a grid, so you had to estimate how many AP each movement action might use. Mutagen has finally made the grid visible to the player, which also opened up a bunch of design space for the player and their creations.

The addition of the grid allows for new targetable abilities to be added into the game’s library of powers. Spray Crystal used to just hit a target and then the two nearest foes, but now it requires positioning your Shaper and lining up the shot, keeping your targets in the cone. Rods previously only contained buff effects that applied to all of your creations, but Mutagen’s grid means that now there are a bunch of rods that can cast powerful destructive magics. My new favorite spell in Mutagen is Airshock, a massive field of lightning that damages and stuns your enemies – it wouldn’t have worked without the new visualization system.

Similarly to rods, there are new crystals containing weaker versions of offensive Shaper spells. I found that the grid gave me confidence in using my items, and I didn’t just stockpile Spray Crystals and then sell them in town like I did in G1. Overall, Mutagen is much more generous than G1 with the items you find throughout the world – I only shopped a few times, and I was never too desperate for more healing pods.

Shapers aren’t the only ones who get to have fun with grids. All creations are now leveled up by selecting specific ability score upgrades and additional active and passive abilities, at the cost of more Essence. Many of these active abilities take the form of cones, but some creations have new single-target abilities that help them displace enemies or move across the battlefield. Creature types in Mutagen are much more distinct than in previous Geneforge games, even though there’s not much build diversity within a species. This differentiation of creatures, combined with the new spells, items, and grid tactics, makes combat in Mutagen much more interesting than it was in G1.

cones-1024x590.jpg

Creations no longer gain their own experience points like they did in the original Geneforge series. This means that losing a minion in battle is less devastating, as you can just make another one of those creatures at the same level with the same stat picks. While this might be stressful for players who develop personal relationships to their creations, it fits the world-view of the young Shaper more closely: creations are disposable, and meant to be replaced.

This creation leveling rework does remove much of the control available in G1, where you could stat each creation to your whims. In Mutagen, each species has an unchanging list of abilities, and by the end of the game you’ll just be picking all of them every time you make a creation. While it does reduce player agency overall, it does provide an interesting conundrum in the midgame, when you might only have the Essence available for one upgrade – are you going to get a new attack, or a point of Magical Skill to boost what you already have?

Removing direct stat manipulation is particularly punishing in the early game, when you have poor control over your creations and they often get spooked and run from fights. In G1 you could just dump points into Intelligence, but that’s not a creature stat in Mutagen. Some folks on the Steam forum have done the math for how control levels in Mutagen work, and right now it’s kind of broken: by increasing your Shaping skill for a type of creature (Fire, Battle, or Magic) you increase your control level. However, increasing that Shaping skill also gives that type of creation an extra level, returning the control level to the previous precarious number.

haXc1r2Y8s.png

This is exacerbated by the number of creations you have, which stretch your focus and reduce your control over all of your minions, and whether or not you outlevel your creations (which you won’t for much of the early game, if you’re investing skill points in Shaping). Vogel says it’s working as intended, and I’m willing to admit that it fits the role-play of the game well: your character starts the game not even knowing how to make a creation, and they’re learning on their feet. Still, it makes an already-challenging game trickier than it needs to be, especially at the start of the experience.

The inventory rework balances out that early-game struggle, and makes equipping your character and carrying items much more accessible. Instead of the combined equipment + pack weight encumbrance system of the original Geneforge series, Mutagen only counts weight for your active equipment. To balance the potentially infinite weight in your inventory, you now only have 25 slots for bag items. This runs out quickly if you’re keeping lots of health pods, spores, crystals, and wands, so Mutagen has also added a “junk bag” functionality, where you can keep anything you won’t need right away. Items in the junk bag can only be removed while you’re in a friendly city, so you can’t cheese the inventory system by keeping a bunch of usable items in the junk bag.

OTafW9V05f.png

The writing in Mutagen is excellent, with that classic dry wit gently masking the horror of the setting. One of Vogel’s best narrative tricks is just repeatedly hitting the player with second-person narration about how the character feels themself changing due to the canisters, which, when tied to progress across the world, makes it feel genuine. Slow but matter-of-fact reveals about the setting pull a lot of the game’s narrative weight, as the player “remembers” the various facets of Shaper society through the eyes of their character: the pigs-in-bowls that run whole laboratories, the dragons that Shapers stopped making because they were too smart, the creation gladiator arenas which were eventually banned and pushed underground.

And under all this, you’re learning details about the Sholai and their own fractured sectarianism. Details about what Trajkov does or doesn’t know are ferreted out, and allies reveal potential paths to his lair – the chamber of the Geneforge.

W9WBAVkOdq.png

Mutagen has a new side storyline that surprised the hell out of me when I found it. About 14 hours in, I made my way to the Eastern Docks, a location I feel is a strong benchmark for being out of the beginning of the game. To my immense surprise, I found a new building on the map. A building with Shapers, from Terrestia, who weren’t trying to kill me. In fact, they couldn’t have cared less about me and the main plot if they’d tried – they’re intended as an example of Shapers who are already indoctrinated in the thought of their society, who mean to shape the laws of reality as master.

This gang is made up of the Shaper Thrackerzod, the Agent Arixy, and the Guardian Kevin. Thrackerzod’s father is Meltar, a name that didn’t ring any bells when I searched for it in other Geneforge materials about the later games. In fact, the only evidence I could find of these characters existing pre-Mutagen is from an animated video made by a group of New Zealand teens. I reached out to Vogel on Twitter to ask about Thrackerzod’s origins, and received no reply. So that’s a fun mystery!

The end-game is gripping. there’s a distinct feeling when you’ve switched over from struggling against the endgame to fighting it on even footing, when you can summon dragons and big freaky grasshoppers and cut your way through the island. While getting to Trajkov doesn’t mark The End of The Game, it does mark The Middle of The End of The Game. You can choose to ally yourself with Trajkov or destroy him, with various permutations therein, but I doubt you’re actually going to be swayed either way once you get there. Meeting Trajkov himself is deeply underwhelming (in a good way), because if you’ve been exploring and talking to NPCs then you probably know exactly what you’re going to do about him by the time you get to his chamber. If you’ve made it this far, no matter which path you took, you’re likely already powerful enough to put your plans into action.

Clicking this sentence will reveal endgame spoilers.
0qmLBJ7Chd.png

The Geneforge games have always been political, but the struggles and separations of the Serviles on Sucia Island feel especially poignant in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic and political unrest in the United States over the past year. The land itself on Sucia has become sick due to the poorly managed containment procedures of the Shapers as they escaped the island, making it difficult to grow crops. It is dangerous to leave one’s village and scrounge for resources due to the rogue monsters coming from… somewhere, and even if the serviles knew where the source was they don’t have the tools or strength to shut it down.

The thing that’s sticking with me the most though is the repeated interactions where Serviles will ask you, a Shaper (the creator of their people) what you think is right. If you give them an honest opinion that conflicts with what they believe, they will reject it completely – even the speech from their god’s lips can not sway their convictions. It is easier to empathize with the Takers in 2021, those serviles who have been abandoned by their caretakers and guardians and in that absence have realized just how poorly they were being treated, now brimming with intent to destroy the system that abused them.

Mutagen adds a new theme about Serviles to the game – the inutile, a Servile-society term for a Servile that can’t work right. Through my own lenses, the idea of the inutile seems a thinly-veiled metaphor for neurodivergence and queerness, and how those things intersect with the larger expectations of living in a capitalist society. Serviles have children the same way humans do, and sometimes Serviles come out non-”standard”, just like humans. Despite the sects’ developing ideologies about their interaction with Shapers, none of them can get away from the culture of work that was instilled in their very genes when they were first created. Any Servile that can’t work in the ways Serviles are supposed to work is outcast, left for the wandering monsters of the island to take care of.

nyUmNQNJnM-1.png

Some of the inutile you’ll meet outside of the Servile villages got obsessively fixated on the job their family line was originally tasked with, and sent out. Some of them don’t want a life of toil. A rare few are just uncontrollably violent. But most of them are totally reasonable people who disagreed with the fanatic philosophy they grew up in, and were forced out of society for it. I found that the inutiles were often kind, curious, and prepared to stand toe-to-toe with a Shaper bearing down at them. They were the actuality of the Awakened and Taker philosophies, existing independently from Shapers and the societies fixated on Shapers.

The epilogue that plays based on your decisions after you leave the island includes a note about Thrackerzod, hinting that he may return in future remasters of the Geneforge series. If those future remasters simply added the new UI, mechanics, and spells, I would probably be very content to pick them up. However, I hope future remasters add more responsive writing to the games, as Mutagen was still plagued by the problem of NPCs that somehow know you’ve done something before you’ve come back to tell them you’ve done it, and yet have nothing particularly new to say about it. Dialogue trees are inconsistent in their accessibility – sometimes broaching a topic down one tree brings that topic to the main conversation panel, sometimes you have to go down that whole tree again just to ask a different question about that topic. Vogel’s writing is excellent, and I want more of it – and for it to flow a little more naturally.

Mutagen is an excellent updating and reimagining of a classic CRPG, with new story, new systems, and a much-needed update of the UI and graphics. The mysteries of Sucia Island, the thrill of unlocking powerful magics, and the danger around every corner make Mutagen a gripping experience despite its methodical play. Any lover of CRPGs should play it – with some conditions.

If you’ve never played Geneforge, this is the time. The game takes up all of a modern screen now, and the combat rework has made the game much more accessible without reducing the challenge. If you’ve tried G1 in the past and couldn’t stomach the outdated UI and low resolution, Mutagen has come to save you from a Geneforgeless life. If you loved the original Geneforge games, Mutagen’s new systems provide a new way of experiencing the classic story and setting. If you loved the story in G1 but weren’t actually that excited by the way the game works, Mutagen’s mechanical reworks probably aren’t different enough to make you love playing, and I’d suggest you pass.

Ultimately, Mutagen is a brilliant example of what a remaster of a classic game can be. The mechanical reworks are intense, but don’t lose the heart of the original game. I look forward to playing Mutagen again and making different choices, and I hope the remaster of Geneforge 2 is in the near-ish future.

REVIEW OVERVIEW
Overall
9

SUMMARY
Mutagen is a thorough rework, update, and expansion of the CRPG classic Geneforge 1. Extensive mechanical reworks, combined with a contemporary UI, grid combat system, and increased graphical fidelity have spruced G1 up to the standards of contemporary play, and have preserved the excellent story and concepts of G1 for many years to come.
 

Dayyālu

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Shaper Crypt
That review has spoilers, for people that want to discover new shit by themselves. I do agree that mechanically the thing has improved.

Also, frankly dreadful - CURRENT YEAR philosophizing, but hey, it's 2021 can't escape the queerness

I have my own thoughts about the new stuff that has been added, but I'll wait until I finish the game before judging. I'm not particularly convinced by the new elements and the new writing up until now, many additions feel a bit.... off.
 

Raghar

Arcane
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Jul 16, 2009
Messages
24,093
The issue was that McAfee believes the game file is a virus.
That's what you get when you are using software made by a old grandad who is also sexual deviant. You are lucky it no longer does massive driver incompatibility. Or did they ever repair it?
 

Alter Sack

Magister
Joined
Dec 22, 2019
Messages
2,342
Discovered right now that there is a Geneforge 1 remake.

Was delighted that I could play the game with improved graphics (played the original 10-15 years ago).

But looking at the screensshots can it really be that this cheap motherfucker still uses basically the same old art assets like 20 years ago?

It looks like that for me.
 

Leonard

Educated
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Aug 10, 2018
Messages
39
Discovered right now that there is a Geneforge 1 remake.

Was delighted that I could play the game with improved graphics (played the original 10-15 years ago).

But looking at the screensshots can it really be that this cheap motherfucker still uses basically the same old art assets like 20 years ago?

It looks like that for me.

What did you expect from the living legend Jeff "Why All Of Our Games Look Like Crap"/"I'm the cheapest bastard in the indie games" Vogel?
 

Alter Sack

Magister
Joined
Dec 22, 2019
Messages
2,342
Maybe a new engine and art assets after using the same old shit for nearly 25 years?

Yeah, well it seems I was naive.

It's a shame because if that bastard puts some effort into it he is able to make really good RPGs.

But it seems that he nowadays only recycles his old games with lowest effort possible.
 
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Saduj

Arcane
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Aug 26, 2012
Messages
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I didn’t play the originals but just looking at screenshots of the older games on Steam, I see a noticeable difference.
 

Tavernking

Don't believe his lies
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Maybe a new engine and art assets after using the same old shit for nearly 25 years?

Yeah, well it seems I was naive.

It's a shame because if that bastard puts some effort into it he is able to make really good RPGs.

But it seems that he nowadays only recycles his old games with lowest effort possible.
Discovered right now that there is a Geneforge 1 remake.

Was delighted that I could play the game with improved graphics (played the original 10-15 years ago).

But looking at the screensshots can it really be that this cheap motherfucker still uses basically the same old art assets like 20 years ago?

It looks like that for me.

He wrote this blog post defending himself. I agree he would risk going out of business if he spent loads on art assets.

"So do a little math and tell me how much money I'll need to shell out to get all 1000 terrain icons done, how much money will be chipped out of my $140000. And then remember that's just terrain! Then I need creature art, and an interface, and portraits, and color paintings, and sfx, and item icons, and ability icons, and ...

RPGs are art-intensive!

Are you seeing why I go cheap whenever I can? Freelancers charge money because they DESERVE it. They are talented people in a hard job. But they are selling the art ala carte, and I'm too much of a doofus to be able to afford too much of it.

To art everything being done from scratch with a unified style and a consistent, pleasing color palette and all the other good things artists like, if I'm lucky and get a lot of charity and really scale back what I want, I can easily end up spending $150000. Again, I can't do it myself. I'm a writer, not an artist, and RPGs absolutely need certain sorts of assets.

So here is the math: Doing art the cheap bastard way, I spend $40000. Doing it the good way, I spend around $150000. 150000 – 40000 = 110000

So to justify the extra art cost, I need to sell $110000 more worth of games just to break even. Remember that number."

"To make that $200000 I think I can earn, I'll need to make about 25000 sales. For an indie game, this is a LOT. But give me a few years and let me luck into a Steam daily deal or a Humble Bundle and I can manage it.

But to break even on my all-new art project, to earn that extra $110000, my still very low-budget indie turn-based-retro-word-heavy RPG needs to sell about 40000 copies.

That increase may not sound like so much more, but it is a LOT. Ask any indie developer. 40000 copies is a HUGELY aggressive number. (So is 25000, but, again, I have an established fan base. Every sale I get requires more work than the sale before it.)

That is just to break even. If we don't hit that number? We can easily lose the entire business, poof, all sacrificed for the sake of a nice, unified art style.

And that is why I need to be the cheapest bastard in indie games."
 

thesecret1

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Messages
6,702
Yeah, he likes to write articles full of excuses, but then you think about it and realize he's pulling those numbers outta his ass. For $150k, he can hire an artist full-time for a year (and any artist worth his salt shouldn't need anywhere near that much time to facelift Vogel's games, let alone just the terrain sprites) and still have plenty of dough left over. If he decided to hire someone outside of US (Eastern Europe, for example), he can easily cut those costs down even further. To give an example from the field, a senior art designer (working at a video game company) I know makes around $38k a year.

Also keep in mind that there's plenty of indie games out there with equal or lower budget, yet they manage to look significantly better than Vogel's shit. The reality of the matter is that Vogel's crowdfunding mentality is "I raised all this sweet, sweet money... And the more I can drive the development costs down for this fucking game, the bigger share of that money will go right in my pocket." The funny thing about it all is that Vogel could actually make a shitload of money with his games... if he was willing to invest into them. as is, his target audience, which would gobble something like Geneforge right up, is usually turned away by his games looking either like vomit, or like shovelware made with the cheapest assets on the market.
 
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Tavernking

Don't believe his lies
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His risk-averse attitude will keep him in business, which is his ultimate goal. Even if he never makes a huge hit he has succeeded.
 

Dayyālu

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Messages
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Shaper Crypt
The subject has been extensively analyzed and Vogel apparently has no idea how to optimize anything.

The key is, he does not want to. He's , as JarlFrank said years ago, an industry survivor, not a success story. He's your local family restaurant that could do better but can't be arsed to read, study and improve. Just do what you know, get the money, retirement.

His risk-averse attitude will keep him in business, which is his ultimate goal. Even if he never makes a huge hit he has succeeded.

Exactly.

I am happy that he didn't fuck up the remake even if the art assets are sometimes twenty years old. Yes, I wasted 14 bucks on this but I'm enjoying it, and it's not like I paid for anything Vogel has developed in the last 12+ years.
 

Alter Sack

Magister
Joined
Dec 22, 2019
Messages
2,342
Maybe a new engine and art assets after using the same old shit for nearly 25 years?

Yeah, well it seems I was naive.

It's a shame because if that bastard puts some effort into it he is able to make really good RPGs.

But it seems that he nowadays only recycles his old games with lowest effort possible.
Discovered right now that there is a Geneforge 1 remake.

Was delighted that I could play the game with improved graphics (played the original 10-15 years ago).

But looking at the screensshots can it really be that this cheap motherfucker still uses basically the same old art assets like 20 years ago?

It looks like that for me.

He wrote this blog post defending himself. I agree he would risk going out of business if he spent loads on art assets.

"So do a little math and tell me how much money I'll need to shell out to get all 1000 terrain icons done, how much money will be chipped out of my $140000. And then remember that's just terrain! Then I need creature art, and an interface, and portraits, and color paintings, and sfx, and item icons, and ability icons, and ...

RPGs are art-intensive!

Are you seeing why I go cheap whenever I can? Freelancers charge money because they DESERVE it. They are talented people in a hard job. But they are selling the art ala carte, and I'm too much of a doofus to be able to afford too much of it.

To art everything being done from scratch with a unified style and a consistent, pleasing color palette and all the other good things artists like, if I'm lucky and get a lot of charity and really scale back what I want, I can easily end up spending $150000. Again, I can't do it myself. I'm a writer, not an artist, and RPGs absolutely need certain sorts of assets.

So here is the math: Doing art the cheap bastard way, I spend $40000. Doing it the good way, I spend around $150000. 150000 – 40000 = 110000

So to justify the extra art cost, I need to sell $110000 more worth of games just to break even. Remember that number."

"To make that $200000 I think I can earn, I'll need to make about 25000 sales. For an indie game, this is a LOT. But give me a few years and let me luck into a Steam daily deal or a Humble Bundle and I can manage it.

But to break even on my all-new art project, to earn that extra $110000, my still very low-budget indie turn-based-retro-word-heavy RPG needs to sell about 40000 copies.

That increase may not sound like so much more, but it is a LOT. Ask any indie developer. 40000 copies is a HUGELY aggressive number. (So is 25000, but, again, I have an established fan base. Every sale I get requires more work than the sale before it.)

That is just to break even. If we don't hit that number? We can easily lose the entire business, poof, all sacrificed for the sake of a nice, unified art style.

And that is why I need to be the cheapest bastard in indie games."

Yeah well, I think we shouldn't be kidding ourselves. Naturally he would use these new art assets for his next 20 games/remakes. So his calculations seem a bit off. If you are a business sometimes you have to invest some money to keep it going.

I think that fact eludes him. And I also think that halfway decent/modern art would significantly increase his customer base/sales.

And after over 20 years as successful indie developer with over twenty games to his name he should have some financial padding to afford some decent new art, the cheap bastard. Otherwise he should really overthink his whole business modell and if it is viable.
 

Alter Sack

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His risk-averse attitude will keep him in business, which is his ultimate goal. Even if he never makes a huge hit he has succeeded.

But will it really keep him in the business long-term?

I think he is in his mid fourties so he has to work for at least another 20 years.

And he has already remade nearly all his games at least once.

At some point in the future only his most hardcore fans will buy the second or third iteration of his games.

But is that a valid strategy for survival and doesn't lead to bankruptcy in his fifties?
 

Alienman

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Codex 2016 - The Age of Grimoire Make the Codex Great Again! Grab the Codex by the pussy Codex Year of the Donut Shadorwun: Hong Kong Divinity: Original Sin 2 Steve gets a Kidney but I don't even get a tag.
The subject has been extensively analyzed and Vogel apparently has no idea how to optimize anything.

The key is, he does not want to. He's , as JarlFrank said years ago, an industry survivor, not a success story. He's your local family restaurant that could do better but can't be arsed to read, study and improve. Just do what you know, get the money, retirement.

His risk-averse attitude will keep him in business, which is his ultimate goal. Even if he never makes a huge hit he has succeeded.

Exactly.

I am happy that he didn't fuck up the remake even if the art assets are sometimes twenty years old. Yes, I wasted 14 bucks on this but I'm enjoying it, and it's not like I paid for anything Vogel has developed in the last 12+ years.

But didn't he try to spruce up stuff, but completely fail with his latest game? I mean, invested the money etc.
 

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