So, this article from Gizmodo has been circulating a lot this week. And by a lot, I mean I ran into it in no less than four different industry forums or webpages, all posted up by people that weren't directly communicating in the other conversations. Could be that one started it, the rest carried it elsewhere, and the next thing we know it's pandemic.
I'm not going to get into a blog vs. blog war of words.... while that sort of thing is actually very good for readership, it's not my cup of tea. I don't know Joe Brown, he doesn't know me, I generally respect Gizmodo for their stance on certain topics, and he even acknowledges this was a rant. (Btw, for the record this article is also thirty-two months old.... which I will address in a bit.) Any company or publication has the right to set- and even change- their own guidelines. What I want to address really is a lot of the conversation points that have come up in the discussions about Kickstarter.
(Disclaimer: My adult life has been spent in business and finance. I have worked for two of the top five lending companies in the world, am currently/have been management in four different fortune 100 companies, and currently aside from my writing career have a management position with the largest company in its industry. As far as the Wargaming/RPG industry goes, I have been a store owner, an employee of the Big Guys, a Tournament Organizer, a Blog Organizer, a contributing author to two industry leading magazines, a rules designer, a playtester, a Consultant, a freelance author, and an avid collector of multiple genres and scales. Basically, I can't sculpt.)
Kickstarters never deliver on time
Enforcement is always an issue, and enforcement costs money. Which means to add enforcement Kickstarter would need to raise fees, which hurts the little guy you're trying to protect. The current policy is the best compromise they could come up with- a program with checks the hundreds of Kickstarters that launch per day for obvious red flags, and a team that reviews projects that get complaints. Cost effective, and allows the Marketplace to police itself. So, hit that button and tell Kickstarter if a project isn't valid or legal. I do- and I've seen them take ones down that I've reported.
Hey, I didn't back Potato Salad. Or some down on their luck actor's movie idea, or a lot of other things. I'm guessing you didn't either. Sure, some people did. Some people like a joke. Others like biting a thumb at the establishment. Still others literally want to throw money away. A few bad projects don't affect the credibility of the platform. Nor do they affect the credibility of anything other project on the platform. Assuming may make an ass out of you and me, but being an ass only makes an ass out of you. Isn't the whole point of the Free Marketplace to find a niche, and find someone to buy your product? Those niches fill really fast. And then they're over. The only reason Potato Salad Guy is still relevant is people keep discussing it. Even Gizmodo posted three separate articles about it. Face it, he's the Voldemort of Kickstarter. Get over you-know-who and go pledge.
Actually... you're wrong. I don't come out and say that often, but here it is. This one is Collective Market theory. Ever notice that restaurants and theaters and museums shoe stores and all sorts of businesses clump themselves together locally? That's because the more of a market, the bigger the draw. This one's proven. It gives people the illusion of more choice. So, the big guy isn't actually making it harder for you to be seen- in fact, he's probably making it easier. Because which one do you think causes more people to start a Kickstarter account for the first time: Big Guy's Newest Kickstarter Supergiveaway, or Johnny Newguys Ten Model Startup? After they get done pledging on the the Big Guy, they're gonna want more. Because they're a gamer, and that means it's likely they're an addict. So now they go looking for their next fix, and they find you. It's Sales by Association, and it's wonderful.
I'm tired of funding projects that don't deliver as intended
Sure, there's a few. There's also a few in every industry. There's always going to be people you shouldn't buy from, and people that get one over on you. Kickstarter didn't create that. They've been on forums and search engines since the dawn of the internet, and were in wargaming magazines for decades before that. People being rotten to each other is a human problem, not a Kickstarter problem. However, an informed consumer is the safest consumer. If you don't recognize a company, check around, ask questions, look at blogs. Someone somewhere has heard of them, and will tell you if they're good or bad. If they're brand new and you just don't know? Don't back them. What you pledge is controllable- by you. Stick to your comfort zone, you'll be happier. If they're legit and the models hit the market, you'll be able to still get them at retail- or maybe even their next project.
Kickstarter is supposed to be about building ideas, not preorders
Kickstarter is killing the LGS model
But Kickstarter is taking sales away from LGSs.
Okay... sort of. This one's a little wonky, so bear with me a moment. We're gonna ramble around the tracks for a minute, but we'll make it around the mountain I promise. So, let's look at the small market guy with a board game/miniature line/rpg/whatever. He's got a killer product, great art, he's hired the best writers and rules designers he could find, and he has a full project ready to go if he can cover the expenses. Which means he needs to pre-sell 250 copies. Now, unless his name is Alessio Cavatore, or one of a very small handful of people with that name recognition, no LGS or Distributor is going to order copies sight unseen. Also, unless he has that kind of name recognition, an existing business operating in the black, and collateral, no bank is lending money on it either. The days of speculative lending and Venture Capitalism are so far gone their fossils, folks. So, how does he get that project funded? By selling 250 copies one copy at a time. Realistically, the Kickstarter didn't take those sales from the LGS... the fact that the LGS operates on too small of a margin due to its business model to take advantage of the sight unseen sale did. This is the time where whether the LGS model is relevant in the 21st Century is precisely the point. Because that used to happen folks. These guys from a company called Heartbreaker drove sight unseen to my store one day with models in the hands- I took a chance, and they became one of my biggest sellers for years. My sales agent for my distributor back in my LGS days literally had a bag that had "Games You've Never Seen Before" written on it, and he's plop that messenger bag down and try to get me hooked on this or that game that Avalon Hill turned down. By the way, that's assuming Avalon Hill didn't buy the rights to the game from a designer and mass market it, because that doesn't happen the same way anymore either.
Okay... sort of. This one's a little wonky, so bear with me a moment. We're gonna ramble around the tracks for a minute, but we'll make it around the mountain I promise. So, let's look at the small market guy with a board game/miniature line/rpg/whatever. He's got a killer product, great art, he's hired the best writers and rules designers he could find, and he has a full project ready to go if he can cover the expenses. Which means he needs to pre-sell 250 copies. Now, unless his name is Alessio Cavatore, or one of a very small handful of people with that name recognition, no LGS or Distributor is going to order copies sight unseen. Also, unless he has that kind of name recognition, an existing business operating in the black, and collateral, no bank is lending money on it either. The days of speculative lending and Venture Capitalism are so far gone their fossils, folks. So, how does he get that project funded? By selling 250 copies one copy at a time. Realistically, the Kickstarter didn't take those sales from the LGS... the fact that the LGS operates on too small of a margin due to its business model to take advantage of the sight unseen sale did. This is the time where whether the LGS model is relevant in the 21st Century is precisely the point. Because that used to happen folks. These guys from a company called Heartbreaker drove sight unseen to my store one day with models in the hands- I took a chance, and they became one of my biggest sellers for years. My sales agent for my distributor back in my LGS days literally had a bag that had "Games You've Never Seen Before" written on it, and he's plop that messenger bag down and try to get me hooked on this or that game that Avalon Hill turned down. By the way, that's assuming Avalon Hill didn't buy the rights to the game from a designer and mass market it, because that doesn't happen the same way anymore either.
Kickstarter is not a store
Two separate but inexplicably linked problems- so I'm going to rapid fire them together. First, unless you have access to a company's financial records, it's really hard to know for certain that A) they didn't need Kickstarter, and B) they actually raked in millions of dollars. I know a lot of Kickstarters that quietly don't cover the spread. You never hear about it because Kickstarter successes breed later success for a company, so it's good for the image to keep those things quiet. However, Reaper publicly gave figures on Bones I, and the net profit wasn't seven figures. If I remember right, it just squeaked into four. I know another (which will remain nameless) where after completing their seven digit Kickstarter, they needed to borrow over $200,000 to complete the project and ship to their backers. So... why are these successes? Because it would have been years or never for them to slowly stockpile the capital to release those lines. They make nothing now of the premise of having those product lines free and clear going forward. It's leverage capital at it's finest.
But they're still keeping my small business from funding
I got burned on a Kickstarter, so now I'm not backing any more ever
I'm glad you're still dating your high school sweetheart, still working at your first job, and your first car is still ticking away. Oh, that's not the case? Yeah... see, the thing is, life is all about opportunities and disappointments. Not everything works out the way we want, which is why I'm not a former starting linebacker for the Pittsburgh Steelers. The funny thing about life though is that it keeps going, and the thing most likely to stop you from finding more joys in it is sadly you. Sure, not all of my projects turned up roses...but an informed consumer can avoid most of the pitfalls. They can still get great deals on soldierdolls in mass quantities. They can still make a difference to a small company that has no other chance of making it in this economic environment. Because at the end of the day, that's what Kickstarter was- and still is- all about.
I'm glad you're still dating your high school sweetheart, still working at your first job, and your first car is still ticking away. Oh, that's not the case? Yeah... see, the thing is, life is all about opportunities and disappointments. Not everything works out the way we want, which is why I'm not a former starting linebacker for the Pittsburgh Steelers. The funny thing about life though is that it keeps going, and the thing most likely to stop you from finding more joys in it is sadly you. Sure, not all of my projects turned up roses...but an informed consumer can avoid most of the pitfalls. They can still get great deals on soldierdolls in mass quantities. They can still make a difference to a small company that has no other chance of making it in this economic environment. Because at the end of the day, that's what Kickstarter was- and still is- all about.
Questions? Comments? Death threats? Drop them all down below, you're entitled to your own opinions too.
I'll see you on the other side of the table
The Second Class Elitist
The Second Class Elitist

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