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Topic: 38 Studios is Working on a Game, Apparently, Afterall (Kingdoms of Amular) (Read 323803 times)
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HaemishM
Staff Emeritus
Posts: 42666
the Confederate flag underneath the stone in my class ring
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He says 38 Studios didn't see any money out of Reckoning's sales and hadn't expected to - the money was committed to EA, which had paid $35M up front for it. If true, not only is the EA exec in charge a FUCKING IDIOT, the people at 38 who signed that contract are COLOSSAL FUCKING IDIOTS. Sure, we'll take a lump sum for the game and if it sells 10 billion copies, we get fuckall from it. WHY NOT? WHAT COULD GO WRONG?  ? He said that on May 12 they learned that the president of "a video-game publishing company" (clearly EA) had approved a $35M deal for the sequel to Reckoning, but it fell apart with Chafee's public comments. Along with discussions with another publisher for $55M for Copernicus, and with a VC for additional financing.
He blames Rhode Island: The Governor's statements were abso-fucking-lutely appropriate. If you have to delay a fucking loan payment just to make payroll, your company is not solvent and is in danger of becoming NOT SOLVENT. If I'm an investor thinking about giving you $35 million AGAIN to produce a game and I hear you can't make payroll, I'm not giving you a fucking dime either. As a governor who is supposed to be responsible for wisely using tax revenue, I wouldn't give more money to a company that can't make payroll. Let's say they sold those $8.2 million in tax credits for $8.2 million. That buys them two months of operation then they are right back in the same boat because that MMOG ain't coming out in two months. "I'll gladly pay you on Tuesday for a hamburger today." No, fuck you, Blimpie. Homey don't play that.
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Engels
Terracotta Army
Posts: 9029
inflicts shingles.
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I wonder why they went with EA in the first place. I thought Mr. Bootstrappy would want to go indie, or at least a vestigial semblance of indie, via Steam, for instance.
Well, the silver lining is that one more republican may have learned that some people have problems making rent without a government handout :P
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I should get back to nature, too. You know, like going to a shop for groceries instead of the computer. Maybe a condo in the woods that doesn't even have a health club or restaurant attached. Buy a car with only two cup holders or something. -Signe
I LIKE being bounced around by Tonkors. - Lantyssa
Babies shooting themselves in the head is the state bird of West Virginia. - schild
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Lantyssa
Terracotta Army
Posts: 20848
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I'm surprised you think he learned anything.
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Hahahaha! I'm really good at this!
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Engels
Terracotta Army
Posts: 9029
inflicts shingles.
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emphasis on 'may'
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I should get back to nature, too. You know, like going to a shop for groceries instead of the computer. Maybe a condo in the woods that doesn't even have a health club or restaurant attached. Buy a car with only two cup holders or something. -Signe
I LIKE being bounced around by Tonkors. - Lantyssa
Babies shooting themselves in the head is the state bird of West Virginia. - schild
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jakonovski
Terracotta Army
Posts: 4388
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I'm pretty sure the Schilling's operating on IOKIYAR.
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IainC
Developers
Posts: 6538
Wargaming.net
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I had heard that EA was absolutely not interested in publishing a sequel to Reckoning. Also I heard somewhere that the publishing deal for Reckoning was a 90/10 split publisher/developer. So BHG would have got some cash from continued sales of Reckoning but not even close to enough to fund an operation burning $4m a month even if it was a breakout hit.
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UnSub
Contributor
Posts: 8064
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My favourite bit of that interview: At the April meeting with Chafee, says Schilling, 38 Studios’ executives said they needed to use $8.7 million in 2011film tax credits to provide that financial bridge and to meet the May 15 payroll.
They also discussed the need to lure private investors by giving them “senior security interests” in 38 Studio’s assets, most notably its intellectual property. That meant Rhode Island taxpayers would take a back seat to any private investor — something that Schilling says always was going to be necessary and had been discussed previously with the Rhode Island Economic Development Corporation, which issued the job-guarantee bonds. Proving that no-one learns anything, 38 Studios were looking to hock the IP - that thing they thought was a big thing for their company and fans - for cash to keep things afloat. All aboard the Flagship, yet again. 38 Studios were so cash poor they were selling everything, getting other people to pay their debts, unable to meet loan payment requirements, yet it is somehow RI's fault for not quietly slipping them more money under the table.
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HaemishM
Staff Emeritus
Posts: 42666
the Confederate flag underneath the stone in my class ring
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That would have totally invalidated the goddamn loan guarantee if a private investor had any stake in the IP. I'm not surprised Chafee told Schilling to go fuck himself. The IP was what 38 used as collateral for the fucking loan.
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Raguel
Terracotta Army
Posts: 1419
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So to recap:
EA committed 35 million Curt used 38 million + 12 million in personal loans RI provided 75 million (~40 million actually received)
That's past WOW and into SWTOR territory. I don't understand how someone didn't see this coming.
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satael
Terracotta Army
Posts: 2431
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If true, not only is the EA exec in charge a FUCKING IDIOT, the people at 38 who signed that contract are COLOSSAL FUCKING IDIOTS. Sure, we'll take a lump sum for the game and if it sells 10 billion copies, we get fuckall from it. WHY NOT? WHAT COULD GO WRONG?  ? Well, for 35m you probably could actually pay off the cost of buying BHG (THQ would have closed it if noone was going to buy it) and pay the salaries of the 70 employees 38 Studios kept from BHG for a while so I wouldn't call the people at 38 Studios idiots...
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« Last Edit: May 29, 2012, 10:44:20 AM by satael »
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Chimpy
Terracotta Army
Posts: 10633
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They may have made an awesome place to work, with amazing benefits. But the problem is they couldn't afford said setup and ran out of cash. I can understand being unhappy at losing a sweet deal, but I do find it a bit odd that all the ex employees seem to be blaming the state for the company failing to pay them.
I would venture a guess that a lot of the people who went to work for 38 probably share Curt's political viewpoint to some extent. And that political philosophy is to spout "personal responsibility" when someone else runs into trouble, and to blame the big bad government when something goes wrong for you. I know for a fact that I would probably not apply to a place that I knew the founder was a blowhard wannabe-politician with views that are diametrically opposed to my own.
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'Reality' is the only word in the language that should always be used in quotes.
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IainC
Developers
Posts: 6538
Wargaming.net
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If Salvatore is to be believed then apparently most of the workforce were a long way to the left of Curt's political beliefs. Then again, I guess that anything economically left of the Ferenghi would be left of Curt's political beliefs.
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Numtini
Terracotta Army
Posts: 7675
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If the deal was that bad, why make KoA at all?
Then why not, the whole thing seems to be idiocy.
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If you can read this, you're on a board populated by misogynist assholes.
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kildorn
Terracotta Army
Posts: 5014
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Political leaning doesn't seem to matter here. People are just bagging on Curt because he was pretty public in his beliefs and seems to actually follow none of them.
I'm just shocked people are assigning blame outside the company when their damned checks bounced. I just can't follow that logic. Did the feds freeze your company's accounts? No? Then it's not the government's fault that your paycheck didn't clear.
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HaemishM
Staff Emeritus
Posts: 42666
the Confederate flag underneath the stone in my class ring
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If the deal was that bad, why make KoA at all? Apparently, it was already in development when 38 bought Big Huge Games, they just repurposed it to fit the Copernicus IP. I'm just kind of flabbergasted at the numbers being thrown around about these games and this development studio. $35 million from EA for an unproven IP from a neophyte dev team headed by a baseball player. They sold 1.2 million units - to break even on that deal with that many units sold, they had to be getting almost $30 per unit sold or thereabouts? On a $60 game? I suppose it's not out of the realm of possibility for them to get a deal like that from the retailers, but that's just breaking even. If the video game industry is anything like the book industry, they can expect to get 50% of the revenue at best. I'm thinking EA broke even on the deal, which would make it even less likely they'd sign off on a sequel for the same amount of money, especially if they got a hint that the dev studio couldn't make payroll. As for the 38 Studios end of it, if they got a flat fee with only 10% of the backend, how the fuck were they expecting that to help with the development of Copernicus? That's not nearly a lucrative enough deal. At $3 a disc (10% of the $30 revenue EA got), that's only $3 million - which is not enough to fund an entire month of the MMOG development. I just don't understand how anyone signed off on those deals.
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kildorn
Terracotta Army
Posts: 5014
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The BHG buy makes no sense with the deal bits we know. It was a huge chunk of cash to buy a company and keep it's employees/payroll expenses. All to publish with a shitty recurring revenue stream, and some bizarre marketing tie in later?
The game was okay, and worth publishing. But I can't see what 38 was trying to get out of the deal besides a higher burn rate on their remaining funding.
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Soln
Terracotta Army
Posts: 4737
the opportunity for evil is just delicious
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None of this story makes sense or adds up. I don't fully believe RI, but don't believe anything at all from CS. There was way too much money in this deal that got lost and used.
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Falconeer
Terracotta Army
Posts: 11127
a polyamorous pansexual genderqueer born and living in the wrong country
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4 millions a month. For a game. Fuck you, it makes me so angry. The fact that said game doesn't even exist is a only a rage bonus.
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shiznitz
Terracotta Army
Posts: 4268
the plural of mangina
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Also, after watching and reading a bit more on this:
What kind of Kool-Aid did they have in house? I am flabbergasted by some of the loyalty. Raise your hand if you think business is about more than money. Anyone? Bueller?
Only when the business is philanthropy.
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I have never played WoW.
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Numtini
Terracotta Army
Posts: 7675
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4 millions a month Can you imagine what you could do in terms of building a game development hub if you took that and gave it to little indies putting together games in the 500k to 2m budget range?
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If you can read this, you're on a board populated by misogynist assholes.
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Ingmar
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Posts: 19280
Auto Assault Affectionado
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It's just utterly baffling to me how they could burn through so much. It has to just be sheer incompetence at an operational level.
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The Transcendent One: AH... THE ROGUE CONSTRUCT. Nordom: Sense of closure: imminent.
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Trippy
Administrator
Posts: 23657
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It's really not that hard with that many people employed. I've mentioned this before but the old rule of thumb* in the Bay Area for VC-funded startups was a burn rate of $10K per person per month. This included salary, benefits, facility costs, overhead, etc.
* I no longer follow the VC business as closely as I used to so I don't know what the number is these days
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Tannhauser
Terracotta Army
Posts: 4436
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Yeah, your employees wanted to hear it from you via a terse email.  Class act management. And these film credits? Nice work getting that tax credit 38 Studios. Nice and bootstrappy there.
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Numtini
Terracotta Army
Posts: 7675
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The BHG buy makes no sense with the deal bits we know. It was a huge chunk of cash to buy a company and keep it's employees/payroll expenses. All to publish with a shitty recurring revenue stream, and some bizarre marketing tie in later? Another thing that strikes me as odd about the BHG purchase is they didn't move the company to RI to meet the loan's "jobs created in RI" requirements (which virtually required an unsustainable burn rate), nor that I could see did they have any plans to do so.
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If you can read this, you're on a board populated by misogynist assholes.
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Ingmar
Terracotta Army
Posts: 19280
Auto Assault Affectionado
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It's really not that hard with that many people employed. I've mentioned this before but the old rule of thumb* in the Bay Area for VC-funded startups was a burn rate of $10K per person per month. This included salary, benefits, facility costs, overhead, etc.
* I no longer follow the VC business as closely as I used to so I don't know what the number is these days
I guess part of my WTF is the number of people they had in the first place - I see that they had a requirement to create X jobs but that just raises more questions about why they agreed to that or how they thought they could pay that many people for as long as it would take to actually get the product out the door.
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The Transcendent One: AH... THE ROGUE CONSTRUCT. Nordom: Sense of closure: imminent.
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Rendakor
Terracotta Army
Posts: 10138
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I think someone was fed too much "You can be anything you want when you grow up" when they were little.
This is an unsurprising attitude from someone who literally got rich playing sports.
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"i can't be a star citizen. they won't even give me a star green card"
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UnSub
Contributor
Posts: 8064
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It's really not that hard with that many people employed. I've mentioned this before but the old rule of thumb* in the Bay Area for VC-funded startups was a burn rate of $10K per person per month. This included salary, benefits, facility costs, overhead, etc.
* I no longer follow the VC business as closely as I used to so I don't know what the number is these days
That also roughly works out for 38 Studios (i.e. $4m / month divided by 389 employees = $10.5k). Other publicly available information indicates the average salary at 38 Studios was in the realm of $88k per year and I suspect they were actually paying rent on the the full 100k-odd sq ft building they were housed in. From what 38 Studios people are saying, it was a dream location to work. High salaries, apparently a full insurance package, lots of talented staff and a management team that backed them up. It looked like people really liked it there. Which makes it hard to switch from one day, "This is the best job in the world!" to "They were lying to my face." Also: this thread title needs a change. 38 Studios is working on a drama right about now.
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Falconeer
Terracotta Army
Posts: 11127
a polyamorous pansexual genderqueer born and living in the wrong country
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It's really not that hard with that many people employed. I've mentioned this before but the old rule of thumb* in the Bay Area for VC-funded startups was a burn rate of $10K per person per month. This included salary, benefits, facility costs, overhead, etc.
* I no longer follow the VC business as closely as I used to so I don't know what the number is these days
Does that mean, for example, that those 250 secretly employed guys and girls at Zenimax Online have been burning 2.5 millions a month for the past few years? Even if they had been working on Elder Scrolls Online for two years (and it has been hinted that it's more than that) it would be about 50 millions. So far. Does it make any sense? Or were they using disposable diamond keyboards to code stuff at 38 Studios. Also, I know nothing firsthand about developing big huge AAA MMORPGs, but having 400 people working on it shouldn't speed up the development somehow?
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« Last Edit: May 30, 2012, 01:21:30 AM by Falconeer »
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Yoru
Moderator
Posts: 4615
the y master, king of bourbon
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Also, I know nothing firsthand about developing big huge AAA MMORPGs, but having 400 people working on it shouldn't speed up the development somehow?
Depends on a lot of factors. In the early stages, more hands makes you move a lot slower. Remember that more hands usually equals more process and more bureaucracy, regardless of the company. Later on, when you're on to the stuff that requires a huge staff, more hands can speed you up. Parallelizable stuff like art, marketing and web presences come to mind. This is why the general game dev cycle is project inception > small core team for a proof-of-concept/first-playable > slightly larger staff for a vertical slice > go wide with a huge team for beta/release > mass layoffs of non-senior talent. Successful MMOs get around the last phase (sometimes) by repeatedly releasing expansions and updates, funded by your subscription/microtransaction money.
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Yoru
Moderator
Posts: 4615
the y master, king of bourbon
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4 millions a month Can you imagine what you could do in terms of building a game development hub if you took that and gave it to little indies putting together games in the 500k to 2m budget range? Sadly, that doesn't work as well. You generally want a few large studios to anchor a hub; they (ostensibly) provide job security and (definitely) provide training and career-entry opportunities. Indies tend not to be able to accept too many recent graduates or provide many entry-level opportunities. The indies tend to be composed of folks with a few years under their belt who've broken off from the larger studios to go their own way. Rhode Island's basic idea was sound (attract one large studio in the hopes of attracting a few more), but their implementation sucked.
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HaemishM
Staff Emeritus
Posts: 42666
the Confederate flag underneath the stone in my class ring
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They attracted the wrong studio. A game dev founded by an ex-baseball player/celebrity makes great headlines, but wasn't a sound investment. If they wanted to create a hub for video game development, they'd have done better attracting one of the major big bucks studios like EA or Activision to locate a studio there. The game might have sucked, but it would have been a safer bet.
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Mrbloodworth
Terracotta Army
Posts: 15148
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They could have gone with Turbine.
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Stormwaltz
Terracotta Army
Posts: 2918
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A big team can be useful if you're at the point where you know exactly what you're doing and need bodies to crank out art and content. Any game is benefited by the former, and themepark MMORPGs in particular require vast amounts of the latter.
My opinion only, of course.
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Nothing in this post represents the views of my current or previous employers.
"Isn't that just like an elf? Brings a spell to a gun fight."
"Sci-Fi writers don't invent the future, they market it." - Henry Cobb
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