

look at all those people excited for the game absolutely no one plays
But those statistics are just for the Steam version! What about the dedicated PS4 Senko no Ronde fanbase that has been clamoring for months to get their hands on a physical release? I for one am glad all 2 of those fans will finally be able to pay eBay scalpers $249.99 for the opportunity to install this timeless classic from a disc!Bananamatic wrote:
look at all those people excited for the game absolutely no one plays
It's a Steam spy chartSumez wrote:What is the second screenshot and what does it mean?
This is how poverty fighters work.Zaarock wrote:Don't see how this is any different from Twinkle Star Sprites, POFV etc. You're not going to get a huge playerbase but if you have a stable one it'll be played for years to come.
Aeon Zenith - My STG.RegalSin wrote:Japan an almost perfect society always threatened by outsiders....................
Instead I am stuck in the America's where women rule with an iron crotch, and a man could get arrested for sitting behind a computer too long.
Ah, I was wondering whether it was my PC or the netcode. There wasn't so much "lag" as a consistent drop to slide-show framerates when playing online. Does this sound similar to the problems you had?Squire Grooktook wrote:I enjoyed the game a lot, and would have liked to put more time into it, but the nauseating netcode eventually made me put it down.
idk this has little similarity to those two games so shouldn't be obsoleted. New VO is almost as poverty in terms of dev time. If senkoro had a bit more polish it'd probably be my favorite of these three. Could be the best game in the series with some more updates & an option to revert to previous character art.iconoclast wrote:Though I'd assume most people interested in unconventional mech fighting games would be playing Gundam or the new Virtual On instead.
the best part is both players having different input lag and neither being aware of itZaarock wrote:There's some weird things going on with the netcode, like the input latency can drastically change between rounds instead of being stable.
Even when you do come across that mythical retail PC release, it almost always requires Steam. Frustrating stuff.Plasmo wrote:PC loses again. PC always loses.
Strikers1945guy wrote:"Do we....eat chicken balls?!"
who's gonna buy senko for $20 at 50% off when dark souls 3 with the first dlc costs $12 at a discount?Xyga wrote: Personally if there's anything I've got against Steam and similar platforms it's the often insanely low prices discounted or not.
but you will happilly support second hand scalpers where developers get no money at allSumez wrote:Well, I definitely don't have any intentions of ever supporting Steam.
Xyga wrote:Liar. I've known you only from latexmachomen.com and pantysniffers.org forums.chum wrote:the thing is that we actually go way back and have known each other on multiple websites, first clashing in a Naruto forum.
Two problems:Bananamatic wrote:who's gonna buy senko for $20 at 50% off when dark souls 3 with the first dlc costs $12 at a discount?
hard to solve that issue if low prices down the line actually get a big dev extra revenue and new fans while devaluing games for smaller devs
Strikers1945guy wrote:"Do we....eat chicken balls?!"
For visibility Steam sure is efficient. But I'm talking about the pricing joke on that platform and Banana underlines the correct issue.GSK wrote:LRG/collector cynicism aside, it's plausible that this is the most effective promotion Senkoro 2 will ever get and that there are a lot of people (relatively speaking) who genuinely didn't know it existed until this announcement.
True dat. But again price is one of the strongest forces, if you allow products on your catalogue to be surrounded by extreme promotions that will disrupt the perception/incentive you just either don't know your job or don't give a fuck. For me Steam are the latter, that place is all about going for the promos or waiting for these because you know they're around the corner. While big bucks productions could care less, the Steam 'method' is no friends of niche developers.GSK wrote:People like to write off a lot of unsuccessful niche/indie games as victims of incompetent marketing but it's entirely possible and even typical to do everything "right" re: marketing/PR and still get absolutely no traction.
Strikers1945guy wrote:"Do we....eat chicken balls?!"
Strikers1945guy wrote:"Do we....eat chicken balls?!"
Strikers1945guy wrote:"Do we....eat chicken balls?!"