Truly the only job in this industry where you receive instant gratification is Public Relations/Marketing. You get to setup the parties, spread word of mouth, deal with the sales of your game, etc. In comparison to the other jobs this one is much more fast paced. The only problem is that once the game has been released, after a while you’re not needed anymore unless there’s a new project being released soon. So job stability is definitely that that high. Your in the department that the company cuts from first. :(Â
Author: DaveWeLike
Back from ComicCon 06
Just got back from ComicCon 06. Boy do I have some stories to tell, as always. They’ll be revealed in the lastest podcast, stay tuned.
PR Analysis: The Divine
The Divine PR was an official announcement of the game itself. Sent out late 7/17/06.
The Divine homepage recevied over 500 vistors, over 1000 page views in first full day of release. The second day it over 400 visitors, over 1000 page views.
You Google ‘The Divine’ nothing comes up. ‘The Divine Game’ has a couple sites on various pages. ‘The Divine Packom Interactive’ has every page about the game.
Now the ordeal is that many of these pages are in foreign languages. In something that I did not expect at all. We have more foreign websites than English websites. So it appears that we could be missing the boat because we won’t be offering the game in all of their languages.
Website Presentation
Your pitch is your website. Whether you are looking for a publisher or a distributor, the first thing they’ll see is your website. When you release your game your website will be the first thing a player interacts with. You must at all costs make the presentation of your website as simple and professional as possible, while maintaining the game’s atmosphere.
If your game is a horror game, the website should be dark and graphically run-down. If you have a puzzle game, the website should be bright and colorful.
No matter what the layout looks like it doesn’t matter if the visitor can’t find what they are looking for. Any page besides News, Forum, Screenshots (Media/Downloads), Purchase, Contact could be pointless. You want to keep things organized and clutterless. If your visitor cannot find what they want in 5 seconds your website layout sucks.
Experimenting
A step that’s always needed throughout game development is experimenting. You’ll never reach your final product on your first try. It’s all about testing variables to see how you can improve the gameplay.Â
Well that’s what I was doing to this blog- experiementing with ads. After some feedback I’ve moved the ads around so they aren’t as intrusive as before, but still effective.
So understand the metaphor here?
Support Yourself, Support Indies!
Hello people wake up!
Without demand there is no supply. If you don’t buy fellow indie developer’s games, who will? What comes around goes around. Help each other out. We’re all in this boat together! 🙂