![]() Yet Temtem, an MMO that released into Early Access just a few months ago has more content in 2 years of development and significantly less funding than Chronicles of Elyria had over a 5 year period. What do I think? That these “indie devs” are giving what I’ll refer to as “indie MMO devs” a bad name.Īfter years of development, Chronicles of Elyria had almost nothing to show. they were just naive enough to think that that was a solid starting point for the game. MMOs are very large, incredibly complex games to make and continue development on.Įither they were being a little disingenuous with the community with what they were asking, they had private investors waiting to invest large quantities of money into the game, or. It takes a lot more than $8 million dollars. Now I’ll be real with you guys here: Developing an MMO takes a lot more than $900,000. That is almost $8 million dollars flushed down the toilet. It went on to garner $1.36 million through initial crowdfunding, and went on to obtain a total of almost $8 million dollars. The game was announced back in May 2016, where the game had a Kickstarter goal of $900,000. Those who no longer want their titles and items can sell them to people who do, those who want to trade for a new location can arrange to do so, and those who want to claim a title can buy one from another player.And it is with that quote that I want to let you all know, if you were one of the many backers of Chronicles of Elyria, then you’ve been scammed out of your money. At the appropriate time – either exposition or launch – players who own the certificates will be able to remit them to Soulbound in order to gain the features described in the certificates. Taking this step allows players to trade, buy, or sell their items for cryptocurrency (or even fiat currency) in a way that is secure, safe, and auditable – so there’s never a question of ownership. These certificates will be able to be freely bought, sold, and traded on one or more of the public blockchain networks. “Beginning after the release of KoE: Domains, we’re going to be issuing digital certificates of ownership to our backers for each title in their player-inventory, as well as a wide-selection of virtual items. Soulbound says that it’ll turn to an NFT system to allow players to sell existing claims to other players using crypto. As I type this, it has the “request to post” button enabled.įinally, the company says that there’s an “increasing number of people” asking about the availability of purchase claims in the game. Either way, Soulbound says it’s going to start muting offenders on social media – and temporarily locking the COE subreddit. While no specific examples are offered, it’s not super hard to imagine that a community willing to lose money to wage a lawsuit has enough angry people to shitpost on the internet. The second section of Soulbound’s blog post addresses toxicity in its community, specifically calling out a “torrent of abuse” and “daily threats of violence” it alleges that “a small but vocal minority” is issuing. According to Soulbound, that would count “thousands” of people who’ve downloaded the KOE launcher and “hundreds” who’ve logged in to date. Well, after ample complaining about “drama” from the “players and influencers” who (rightly) reacted with “suspicion” about signing the NDA under the circumstances, Soulbound has now rewritten the NDA to attempt to “remove any ambiguity” and to “show serious about Kingdoms of Elyria’s development and desire to gain your feedback as continue to release updates.” Most notably, the second alteration explicitly adds a section about retroactivity and services unrelated to the test in spite of the blog post’s insistence that this isn’t a substantive change, it sure looks to be, and it’s not legally clear what that could mean for people who’d already signed the earlier version. While as we noted that’s not an unusual clause in NDAs and terms of service, players who are already currently engaged in a class-action lawsuit against Soulbound Studio for its past transgressions recommended not signing any such thing. It included a clause that seemingly waived the players’ rights to engage in class-action lawsuits, among other things. A week ago, Chronicles of Elyria backers sounded the alarm on a new NDA that Soulbound Studios was asking them to sign in conjunction with the Kingdoms of Elyria testing.
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