6 hours ago:
Announcement! Double Fine and 2 Player Productions will use Kickstarter to fund an Adventure Game + documentary! Whoa. doublefine.com/news/comments/…
— Tim Schafer (@TimOfLegend) February 9, 2012
15 Minutes ago:
$407,470. I love you, world. Double Fine fans are the greatest fans in the whole world. Your gonna make me cry. :) :) :)
— Tim Schafer (@TimOfLegend) February 9, 2012
I’m always amazed of how fast these things can spread and reach the right audience. And there are a few things that make me really happy about seeing things like this:
1) It’s an amazing time for Indie Games. You can do great things – even in a niche like Adventure Games – when you talk directly to your fans and supporters. This changes a whole industry. I think we’ll see more and more success stories like Minecraft and this Kickstarter project soon.
2) It’s a real boost for the community. There are so many people who love innovative and unconventional games. Most of these titles wouldn’t be touched by a single publisher since they won’t reach the critical mass of titles like Battlefield of CoD. But with tools like Kickstarter and all the usual Social Networks fans can help the game designers to bring their projects alive – and even more important: Connect with their peers.
3) It’s easier than ever to get started with things like that by your self. All the tools are just a click away, technology can be picked up faster and simpler by the minute and costs are at an all time low. So it basically boils down to the most important thing to have: A good idea.
To make a long story short: We live in amazing times.
(Oh, and I backed this project of course – you should, too.)
Oh, and while we are at the topic: Hig-Res Textures! That’s quite epic.
The quality’s not exactly stellar, but that’s what comes from photographing your telly with an iPod. I think it has an Ansel Adams feel to it, Skyrim’s kind of like a National Park anyway.
A Tumblr dedicated to the virtual geographic of Skyrim. I guess it had to be done.
8-Bit Sand People? Low-Res Bounty Hunters? Come on, it doesn’t get much better than this.
Walked out of my room to make myself a coffee, came back and looked at the scene you can see above and though: Hey, that is pretty nerdy. Took a picture, uploaded it to my blog, wrote the few words you are reading in the moment and thought: Sweet, I’m even gaining some bonus nerd points right now. #levelingup
Kevin Systrom talks about his life, Entrepreneurship and Instagram. Oh, I was really looking forward to this episode of Kevin Rose’s “Foundation” series.
I’m especially thankful for one of Systrom’s comments about competition and about how much harder it is to build a company and not ‘only’ a product.
“I don’t worry day on and day out about someone launching a competitive product with filters. I really don’t. I worry about our ability to build the products that realize the vision I just described. That’s the hardest thing. It’s the hardest thing to build a company.”
Make sure to watch the whole thing. Totally worth it.
A nice video by Ericsson. I always think that it is pretty obvious that we are indeed “On the Brink of a Networked Society” – so no news here. But I really enjoyed the video for all the different comments and insights from people like David Rowan (Wired UK), Caterina Fake (Founder of Flickr) and Eric Wahlforss (SoundCloud). Now throw some game stuff in as well (“Eve Online” in this case) and you got me hooked.
Wow, finally. This blog has a search bar. Right there at the bottom of the page.
To be honest, I was truly frustrated with the build-in Tumblr search so I never integrated one at all. But just the other day I stumbled upon a post by Pat Dryburgh who wrote about integrating a custom DuckDuckGo search bar into your site. I tried it and since it worked so well I decided to keep it.
If you want to do the same thing, it is really easy. Just paste this code snippet where you want your search bar to appear, add you domain, apply some nice CSS and you’re done.
<form method="get" id="search" action="http://duckduckgo.com/">
<input type="hidden" name="sites" value="YOURDOMAIN.COM"/>
<input type="hidden" name="k8" value="#444444"/>
<input type="hidden" name="k9" value="#D51920"/>
<input type="hidden" name="kt" value="h"/>
<input type="text" name="q" maxlength="255"
placeholder="Search…"/>
<input type="submit" value="DuckDuckGo Search"
style="visibility: hidden;" />
</form>
If you need more customization DuckDuckGo has an extensive list of parameters you can use.