Sunday, June 9, 2013
Consoles, I believe are dead – Firefall Developer

Consoles, I believe are dead – Firefall Developer

The humble home video game console and the traditional publisher-led model that supports it is on its last legs, so says Firefall creator and former World of Warcraft lead Mark Kern, with developer-centric free-to-play titles waiting in the wings to replace them.

Speaking in an interview with Eurogamer earlier this week, the Red 5 Studios CEO argued that the free-to-play model offers developers much more room to flex their creative muscles. According to him, this will allow developers less worry trying to create AAA Games.

publishers can hope to offer.

“The model is transitioning away from these big boxed games where you’re pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into a title, to these sorts of games that don’t count on the distributor,” he told us.

“They don’t need the distributor to succeed, so a lot more money goes into the game rather than to marketing and you get to grow organically with your players. And as there’s no barrier to entry for players you can start to compete on fun instead of marketing, which is really the area that we as developers should be in.

“We should be competing on the strength of our ideas and the fun of our gameplay, not the IP, or the license behind the title, or the size of the marketing push.”

Kern went on to cite both the death of the middle-tier game and big publisher’s relentless hire-and-fire cycle as signs that the traditional boxed model is, as he puts it, “broken”.

“Look at the symptoms. Look at the fact that there’s no middle ground anymore,” he posited.

“You’re either an indie game or you’re a massive AAA, IP-backed sequel with derivative gameplay that’s rehashed over and over again as it’s the only safe bet you can make when you’re spending hundreds of millions of dollars.

“The failure is that there’s no middle ground. All the games in the middle that could have been made but have been squeezed out and we’ve seen all these independent studios get closed down over the last few years.

“The other troubling symptom is this wave of lay-offs we have after every product launches,” he continued.

“People say ‘Oh, that’s normal, Hollywood does it all the time.’ Well, it’s not normal. It’s a symptom of your business being broken.

“In Hollywood they work on contract – it’s very different. They expect only to work from A to B. In games, these big publishers are hiring swathes of people expecting to have jobs long-term but then lay them off at the end of a project because it doesn’t quite deliver. This is unsustainable.”

“It takes billions of dollars of investment to create a console and then you have to milk it for five to seven years in order to get your money back,” he explained.

“I think the model is broken. You keep making these bigger and bigger bets and what that forces you to do is play it safer and safer. And if you play it safer and safer with your gameplay, people will get tired of the crap you’re serving. When that happens, they get bored and they will leave. And you haven’t fostered any of the middle ground innovation and new ideas that you need to tap into next.

“So something has to change. Consoles, I believe, are dead.”

According to Kern, the future lies with mobile and PC, where developers can grow their audience by keeping prices down and focusing on creating new experiences.

“Isn’t it ridiculous that you can buy these fantastic games on iPad, but then you get a publisher like Square Enix charging an astronomical price for an old game port? They just don’t get it. They don’t get that we have to lower the barrier for entry.

“You have to compete on fun as you no longer have a lock on distribution. Big publishers can no longer rely on the fact that they’re the only ones that can get distribution for their titles. We have to compete on different things now, and get back to fun and innovation.”

I suppose everyone in the game industry has there own point of view, but this guy just seems to want everything for himself in a sense.

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  • nick

    of course it gives developers more room to try be a bit more creative, but are you really going to spend 150M on a free to play game?
    your going to go out there and spend 150 million bucks on a free to play game and hope that you will make your money back from the few people that decide to pay for the extras?
    yeah, good luck with that bub!
    not saying theres no money to be made in F2P games, theres heaps!
    but to say there going to replace normal developed and funded games is sheer lunacy!

  • http://www.gamesthirst.com Ernice Gilbert

    That’s just rubbish talk, I reckon. Totally rubbish.

  • nick

    you can make allot of money in F2P games!
    opens up a game to allot more people, and smaller micro transactions.
    allot of people wont spend 60 bucks on a game because they see it as too expensive.
    but if the games free they get it, they spend hours playing it and am invested in it.
    then, once they have put their time and am invested in the game then they are much more likely to pay for things.
    F2P definitely has its place, but not with high budget games.
    i honestly cant see publishers putting 50M bucks into making a game and letting it go F2P hoping they will get their money back.
    some games would make a hell of allot more money as F2P, but others would not.
    its a huge risk F2P i cant see many companies willing to go with it.

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