Ouya Free the Games Fund project 'Elementary, My Dear Holmes' suspended by Kickstarter for "Suspicio
11 replies, posted
[quote=Joystiq]
[B]
The crowdfunding campaign for Elementary, My Dear Holmes was suspended by Kickstarter today. The point-and-click adventure game had already reached its $50,000 goal, earning $58,770 before its suspension, days before it was slated to end on September 13. The reasons for the project's suspension by Kickstarter are unclear, though the developer said it addressed concerns regarding "suspicious accounts" that supported the game.
[/B]
"When the uproar against Elementary, My Dear Holmes was brought up, we contacted Kickstarter and Amazon, asking them to investigate the accounts and take action accordingly," the game's creator Sam Chandola told backers. "We wanted to get on top of this and did not want anything to do with any of what was happening as it was an extremely negative campaign for us. Strong personal accusations were going up against us, and it was a huge drain on our time, energy and resources."
[B]
Ouya announced its $1 million Free the Games Fund program in July as a means of encouraging developer support of its console by offering monetary rewards for successful Kickstarter-funded games that vow to remain Ouya-exclusive for six months. Elementary, My Dear Holmes was one of two games that reached its funding goals last week as part of the program. The other game, Gridiron Thunder, fell under scrutiny for the amount of funding it received from just 126 backers. According to Ouya, the project "successfully qualified to receive the match," and is still up on Kickstarter, sitting at $114,437 from 161 funders with 46 hours before the campaign ends.
"The decision to suspend the Kickstarter campaign for Elementary, My Dear Holmes was made by Kickstarter. And at this time, you have the same information that we do," Ouya told Joystiq in a statement. "An essential element of the Free the Games Fund is that only projects that are successfully funded through Kickstarter are eligible. Until Kickstarter raised a red flag on this project, it complied with our terms and conditions."[/B]
As for Elementary, My Dear Holmes, Chandola told Joystiq that he is turning to other funding methods. "We had quite a few venture capitalists interested in the project after seeing our initial pitch video and the traction we were getting, and that is the path that we will be taking now," he said. "I have already received mails from a few of them after the plug was pulled expressing their support and interest for the project, so Elementary, My Dear Holmes will definitely be a game that will see the light of day."
[/quote]
[url=http://www.joystiq.com/2013/09/06/ouya-free-the-games-fund-project-suspended-by-kickstarter/]Source[/url].
Not surprising that this happened.
[quote]Ouya announced its $1 million Free the Games Fund program in July as a means of encouraging developer support of its console by offering monetary rewards for successful Kickstarter-funded games that vow to remain Ouya-exclusive for six months.[/quote]
I still cannot get over this. Not just the scheme in and of itself but the fact that they seriously thought to name it that. "Free the games by restricting them to our shitty platform," so ridiculous.
Ouya: the Segway of video game consoles.
[QUOTE=Mingebox;42105999]Ouya: the Segway of video game consoles.[/QUOTE]
Expect Segways are awesome and useful.
While Ouyas are....shit.
"We're freeing the gaming industry, see? We're Android! We're going to make you FREE!"
Yeah, no.
[QUOTE=Dukov Traboski;42106037]Expect Segways are awesome and useful.
While Ouyas are....shit.[/QUOTE]
A hobby horse is much cheaper, gets you exercise, and you won't be taken any less seriously riding one down the sidewalk.
[quote=Source]Gridiron Thunder fell under scrutiny for the amount of funding it received from just 126 backers. According to Ouya, the project "successfully qualified to receive the match," and is still up on Kickstarter, sitting at $114,437 from 161 funders with 46 hours before the campaign ends.[/quote]
That's around $710 per funder, you'd have to stick your nose in a porterpotty to smell that much bullshit, why is this project not closed? I mean, maybe they have some extremely wealthy supporters, but seriously were they even trying to make it look legit?
Let's not forget about the Incredible Gridiron Thunder they also funded
[video=youtube;fqf2-b8Ymzw]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fqf2-b8Ymzw[/video]
[QUOTE=tarkata14;42106148]That's around $710 per funder, you'd have to stick your nose in a porterpotty to smell that much bullshit, why is this project not closed? I mean, maybe they have some extremely wealthy supporters, but seriously were they even trying to make it look legit?[/QUOTE]
Not only that, but some of those 'wealthy donators' have been missing or presumed dead.
Let us take the curious case of Alivia Kail, a woman missing since 2011 from Pittsburgh, who's body [url=http://www.wtae.com/news/local/allegheny/police-search-for-body-of-missing-woman-alivia-kail-near-allegheny-county-airport/-/10927008/20356176/-/7wpixwz/-/index.html]hasn't been found[/url]:
[img]http://i19.photobucket.com/albums/b196/Starmenclock/ouya-sham-alivia-missing-persons_zpsae1b604f.png[/img]
Yet she made a donation to this very kickstarter:
[img]http://i19.photobucket.com/albums/b196/Starmenclock/ouya-sham-alivia_zpsc3833af5.png[/img]
This alone should have had the project shut down.
Are they laundering money?
[QUOTE=Mingebox;42106129]A hobby horse is much cheaper, gets you exercise, and you won't be taken any less seriously riding one down the sidewalk.[/QUOTE]
Segways are useful but only in niche applications. Like if you work in a stadium and you need to travel several miles each day and at a fast pace. All but the most conditioned athletes will be able to keep a good pace running that distance every day.
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