Star Citizen's Crowdfunding-Driven Grey Market 88
szyzyg writes "Star Citizen has broken all the crowdfunding records, raising almost 25 million dollars in the last year to fund Chris Roberts' promise of the ultimate spaceship game. However, an investigation sheds light on a murky secondary market where items are being resold by investors for profit, all for a game that won't be fully released for two years. The standard crowdfunding tactic of rewarding early backers has created a tiered system with ample room for profiteering, profits which many not be shared with the developers. Few things would please me more than Star Citizen succeeding, but backers should read this article before being tempted to trade up their internet spaceships through a third party."
Another EVE online? (Score:2, Insightful)
Just what we needed.
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Well I just hope they implement the necromonger's creed for PvP: "You keep what you kill!"
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In gang fights (which most fights are), it
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Star Trek Online failed miserably in my mind because I had to micro-manage the damned shields, "reinforcing" them, all the while mashing other buttons to fire phasers or torpedos as soon as they recycle, can't automate any of that crap. 100% console type design.
Please tell me this isn't that. God almighty please tell me it isn't that.
Re:Another EVE online? (Score:4, Informative)
So actual flying skills will mater. Knowing how to properly dodge enemy fire, perform evasive maneuvers (possibly overriding safety systems that limit the G-forces you receive to do more extreme maneuvers, but then risking blacking out if you go beyond your body's and your suit's limits to keep oxygen going to your brain).
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Eve requires you to noin big, mrderous bands to build essentially persistant space cities in fully PvP space.
While that is fun, it's difficult for autists to make headway by themselves.
And now there's voting, so not only do you have to worry about seizures through force -- you habe to worry about seizures by way of charasmatics leading voters.
Waitress, can I get another tallboy? Thanks.
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So far no one has really tried to make another 'EvE' on any significant scale, not when it comes to the things that make EvE unusual.
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I just don't like the scamming hacker thieves (Score:5, Insightful)
What sickens me is the hackers who steal people's accounts. This is really not much different than people scamming people's bank accounts, but there is less enforcement. I just don't like hackers stealing peoples video game assets. These people who phish for passwords and steal credentials should have to go to jail if caught. And people should be trying to catch these guys.
You can't write it off as the account being worth nothing, so there is nothing of value lost. The fact that they sell your lewt shows that there is stuff of value there. They're nothing different than common thieves. I just don't know why law enforcement doesn't target them.
Re:I just don't like the scamming hacker thieves (Score:4, Insightful)
I just don't know why law enforcement doesn't target them.
Limited resources. They spend more resources on crimes that are more damaging than simply having a game account stolen (which sucks, but is hardly life-altering) or crimes they can make money off of (speeding, asset forfeiture, etc.).
And, except for that last part where they play the role of modern-day highway robbers (literally, even), that's as it should be. There are enough *real* crimes that cause victims serious harm, so having your video gaming account stolen should never be a top priority for police, IMO.
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[The police] spend more resources on crimes that are more damaging than simply having a game account stolen (which sucks, but is hardly life-altering) or crimes they can make money off of (speeding, asset forfeiture, etc.).
To be fair, speeding is a major factor (though clearly not the only one) in increasing the frequency and severity of car crashes, which in turn can definitely have life-altering consequences. (You can't get a much more "life-altering consequence" than being killed, and even with modern car safety features, the best way to not die from a car crash is to not be in a car crash at all.) Speed has a two-fold impact on crash frequency and severity: more kinetic energy, and less time for drivers to react so as to
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what a great idea! (Score:1)
Re:"all for AN game" (Score:5, Funny)
I'm a American and I think that most of my fellow citizens are kind of stupid. Their just not that smart compared to a Europeans. I blame are government.
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WOOOOOOOSH!
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This rule is not unlike many other languages. In Spanish, for instance, verbs take on a masculine or feminine form depending on if the subject is a male or female....
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I don't know what dialect of English you're speaking where you DON'T use 'an'... but I've never seen one - and I'm not American (I'm English).
1st rule of being a grammar-nazi: be good at grammar
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I wish I could vote you up. I've been all around the world and have never encountered English spoken WITHOUT the distinction between 'a' and 'an'. I am baffled as to how the OP could possibly come to the conclusion that this is errant, and that it is ONLY Americans that do it. Makes me chuckle a bit, actually.
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WHY do you AMERICANS?
Why do stupid non-Americans* always make such idiotic blanket generalizations about Americans? Some sort of ePenis-envy?
* Not that all non-Americans do this - just the stupid ones.
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"Scare Quotes" (Score:1)
Black market is for illegal trade, and grey market is supposed to imply some sort of wrongdoing.
Honest evaluation: people who got in early enough and anticipated a larger future demand than would be present for the initial kickstarting decided to buy up extra packs and sell them for a profit. This is the same as people who wait in line to buy PS4s and then resell on ebay for profit. They are selling their small amount of time, effort, patience or simply timing so that people who did/could not get into the
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But, but, think of the children! These people are clearly promoting terrorism, drug abuse and copyright infringement! Probably the starships traded also had lewd posters on their interior walls!
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It works the same way when investing in businesses.
People who invest earlier get a larger part of the pie, then they sell it for profit to new investors. The whole point of the exercise is to get a return on your investment, typically multiplying it by 4.
Of course, this isn't quite like investing: crowdfunding is more like a gift in exchange for a future product, there are no returns on investment.
BS (Score:4, Insightful)
So? What's the problem?
The dev team got the money to make a AAA GPU-burning space-sim without moronic publishers ruining it.
People get to see the inside of game dev, week to week, which is really cool imo
Someone else making money with it is, for me, completely irrelevant, it is not detracting from the development, it's not harming their bussiness, why should I care?
Or is it one of those "only me" concepts?
PS: Star Citizen is AWESOME. and it is NOT Eve online, for fucks sake....
Re:BS (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem is:
Trading forums deliberately suppressing information on actual prices and alternatives.
Package resellers on Amazon & Ebay charging large markups because the buyers don't know the mechanics.
Star Citizen MODERATORS in charge of enforcing the trading bans on the official forum directing users to their own trading service.
In short, the problem is information asymmetry, which this article attempts to address.
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Two problems:
1. People who want to buy the limited packages could have been giving the money to the devs to fund the game. Which is the entire point of the whole "selling ships before game is even out" thing.
2. Obfuscation: by not allowing discussion of some of the practices and fine points, such as price differential for early backers, newcomers may actually end up getting screwed. They think they're backing the dev, when in fact they're lining profiteers' pockets.
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2: These people are actually backing the development, just at a slightly smaller percentage than they may think they are.
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So when you donate money to charity through a middleman and he takes a sizeable portion of your money, it's ok?
Where do you draw the line? How much can he take? Can he not tell you that he's taking a portion of the money for himself? In some countries that is actually illegal to do.
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So when you donate money to charity through a middleman and he takes a sizeable portion of your money, it's ok?
It's not necessarily OK, but it's definitely standard practice, more's the pity.
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They have specifically stated that these things won't even be exclusive - all ships will be attainable through in-game means. You may get a unique skin at best.
Stock IPO (Score:2)
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So overblown (Score:5, Insightful)
This is ridiculously overblown. People are so butthurt about not being able to get in on the super special offers of Idris Corvettes or whatever, and they're jealous of people who can pay the ridiculous secondary market prices. Meanwhile, CIG itself is butthurt that they're not getting any money off the secondary market that they inadvertently created by offering limited issue ships and empowering users to transfer them. You know, because the millions upon millions of dollars that people have given them up front isn't enough.
If you create items that are scarce and enable people to trade them, you are creating a market. Period. No exceptions. You cannot then start whining about how you don't get automatic royalties every time somebody sells an item, or even stupider complain that people are selling them in the first place. Making them scarce gave them value, making them transferable created the market. Everybody get over themselves and stop whining. Oh and scams? First rule of ANY market: CAVEAT EMPTOR, BITCHES.
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"CAVEAT EMPTOR, BITCHES."
Good thing someone wrote a guide explaining all this then eh?
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Considering some of the tales of folly I've heard, I do indeed question the quality of those in mentoring roles, but in the end the responsibility lies ultimately in
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"CAVEAT EMPTOR, BITCHES."
Good thing someone wrote a guide explaining all this then eh?
Yea, that guide is called "capitalism."
You're seriously going to pretend that a concept normally expressed in Latin is some newfangled idea that you have to be made explicitly aware of on each and every financial transaction?
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No, I'm suggesting that the article explains all the things that buyers should be wary of and therefore makes an excellent guide for buyers.
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No, I'm suggesting that the article explains all the things that buyers should be wary of and therefore makes an excellent guide for buyers.
If you're referring to some specific document that exists, cite the source.
Otherwise, your post is ambiguous enough to make the rest of us think you're generalizing.
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The specific document is the articlee
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The specific document is the articlee
But the article only exists because unscrupulous individuals were profiting off others' ignorance, and the guys who make the game should have written such a guide earlier to protect the majority of their customers from being exploited by a minority.
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CIG is getting money off the secondary market, just not as much as if the buyer paid them directly. The veteran backers are still paying CIG for these items, just at a slightly smaller rate than the non-veterans to which they re-sell.
Monetizing the early mover advantage? (Score:2)
I'm shocked. SHOCKED.
Markets, like life, find a way.
tl;dr version (Score:4)
people bought goods that were of limited distribution and then resold them for more money.
isnt this just basic supply and demand?
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They'd better ship the thing. (Score:2)
They'd better ship the thing. There have been some large, overfunded Kickstarter projects that never shipped. Remember "Clang and the Pitfalls of Kickstarter"? [slashdot.org] Then there was the Form 1 low-cost 3D printer. Despite being way overfunded, the delivery date always seems to be four months away. It was four months away last December [archive.org], and it's four months away now [formlabs.com].
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Re:They'd better ship the thing. (Score:4, Insightful)
If you take into account that kickstarter games are about 50% cheaper, unless you get burned half of the time, you are still financially ahead. And if you take into account that most of these games would have never been made without kickstarter, you are even more ahead.
But I guess that bit if math is beyond most people.
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Any time people don't get the maximum benefit, they bitch and moan.
They are apparently unaware that life fundamentally isn't fair, and never will be.
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I never backed anything on kickstarter yet, but from the secondary information i got, i always thought that you get your money back if the project fails. Am i under a false assumption?
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I never backed anything on kickstarter yet, but from the secondary information i got, i always thought that you get your money back if the project fails. Am i under a false assumption?
You're right -- the terms and conditions of Kickstarter state that you must give out all the promised rewards, and as most of the rewards tiers for Star Citizen include access to the game, they have to ship something. The problem is, what constitutes a game? Are the claimed features all contractually binding? Would there be any legal comeback if Star Citizen was released as simply an old-school Elite clone with a slightly fancier flight interface made with CryEngine and featuring all the starship types incl
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You could have just said you've never funded a Kickstarter project.
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That's the shipping date for a new purchase ... formlabs has been shipping out the kickstarter orders for a while now.
This game already exists, wtf. (Score:1)
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First, I'll say thank you for bringing a game like Vendetta Online to my attention.
It seems positively interesting, I'm glad to know about its existence, and I have a deep respect for the devs for such longevity in the game market (and the support of so many different OS ... impressive).
Second, a few points about Star Citizen that Vendetta Online doesn't have.
Chris Roberts.
Private Servers.
Top of the line graphics and aimed for the future : Latest Crysys engine + 4k resolution.
To conclude, do not be jealous
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Star Citizen is actually more like the X series.
X Rebirth (upcoming)
X3 Reunion (previous iteration)
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Re: This game already exists, wtf. (Score:2)
Play it and see. Or read the description on wikipedia.
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Sadly overhyped (Score:2, Informative)
SC is already getting overhyped beyond means, and ship sales are just adding fuel to the fire. This decision alone from CIG has been huge turn off for many players to check it out, because while sandbox space sim doesn't have special "win" scenarios, still it's gives huge advantage right out start at the game for people with bought ships.
I personally don't like this huge in-game assets sale. I know SC fans argue it's for supporting SC development, but...seriously. If you are so curious to support game, do i
Sounds like share trading in Vaporware (Score:1)
Discount jordan shoes Air Max shoes (Score:1)