Like many others, I recently read the news that Terraria is no longer going to be actively developed
1. It’s sad news for the fans of the game, but ultimately they more than got their money’s worth. The game is complete in and of itself and well worth $10, and is worth having even if it could have grown more than it did (this is true of our game Tidalis as well, which is the only game of ours which has had development halted). Having untapped potential left in a game concept largely just means that it was an awesome concept.
2. It’s unfortunate that there won’t be ongoing bugfix support, and that’s something that I would handle differently (and in fact we do, for our game Tidalis). Hopefully they will reconsider their position on that at least for bugs of substantial importance. But either way it’s none of my business, and they seem to have done right by their players so far, so I have faith they’ll do whatever winds up being best.
3. Also unfortunate is the fact that more wasn’t communicated in advance about their intentions with the game. I’m sure that they themselves didn’t know, but having a grace period where they said “we’re ending support for this in 6 months, so let’s get in the last things we can between now and then” might have done more to appease fans. We didn’t do that with Tidalis, for the record, but that’s because Tidalis financially bombed. Terraria made such excellent money that they shouldn’t have had that concern.
4. I think that embarking on a new project, after so long spent on Terraria, is probably a healthy thing. Having a break to work on Tidalis was an enormous help for reinvigorating us to work on AI War versions 4.0 and 5.0. Maybe the same will be true for the Terraria devs. Or maybe their next project is actually going to be the successor to Terraria.
5. My own strategy with AI War has been to release paid expansions periodically, which both earn us more money directly, as well as making the base game sales spike, earning us more money indirectly. Both of those are how we pay the bills and keep the lights on, but that’s but one of two paths. The other path is the traditional sequel/succesor-game path, and it sounds like the Terraria devs are going that route. It’s not what I would do with my own games, purely for matters of personal taste, but it’s an enormously valid choice to make.
TLDR: I don’t think that the Terraria devs acted in bad faith with anybody, but a little more forewarning would have smoothed things over better with their fanbase. Either way, they still seem like really standup folks to me. And the reason I’ve not played their game yet is that I’m worried I’ll get hooked and spend too much time doing that rather than coding my own games!
The big thing that worries me about Terraria halting game development, as a game developer, is that this will create a perception that “you never know when developers will just randomly close up shop on a game.” Minecraft is still sort of being developed, but really slowly, and that was a game I played a lot of — I remember when the update frequency suddenly plummeted, and it was jarring. My worry is that players will be mistrustful of post-release support from indie developers for this reason.
For AI War, we have an incredibly lengthy history of post-release support spanning since May 2009 up until the present (and still going). You may notice that there are two big gaps, though:
1. During the time we were developing Tidalis, AI War development really scaled back for about six months, and all but disappeared for two.
2. During the time we’ve been developing AVWW, AI War development scaled back even further, and daily releases became weekly, then monthly, and only recently have resumed being weekly again.
What’s different about both of these cases from Terraria or Minecraft is that we gave at least three months of warning before these events happened. There was lots of “hey guys, we’re pushing out an enormous number of features here for 5.0 in preparation of taking a while off after 5.0/Light of the Spire releases, just so you know!”
The break turned out to be substantially longer than we had expected (5 quarters instead of 2-3), but sometimes that’s how it goes. And the game has still managed to grow and get better polished during that time… just at a much slower rate.
We’ve also made it clear that we plan at least two more expansions for AI War. This is still true, despite the fact that we’ve had to push back the release dates because AVWW development has run over-long. It’s those sorts of expansions that really keep the game growing in leaps and bounds, and which make for one really large experience rather than a string of similarly-sized sequels.
That’s why I like expansions instead of sequels, as a player and a developer: you get to keep all the content from the first game, as well as get all the new content from the second game. If Left 4 Dead 2 had been a $50 expansion pack to the first game, with the same content it had plus the ability to keep the characters and maps from the first game if I had the first game also, that would have been awesome. I still bought both games anyhow, and both were worth it, but it would be better if I could put them together rather than having them as two isolated experiences. As it is, I pretty much only play L4D2 now, never L4D1.
Sometimes these things just need to be explicitly stated: again, otherwise you’re leaving players wondering. I keep talking about how we are approaching 1.0, and about various things that we’d “like to be able to do” after 1.0. But what’s really going to happen after 1.0?
Our plan is to take the AI War route, and release tons of free DLC as well to do at least a couple of paid expansions. Hopefully in 2-3 years, we’re still developing both AI War and AVWW — that is the ideal scenario for me personally.
Really, the only way I could see that not coming to pass is if AVWW financially bombs like Tidalis did. Tidalis was simply too niche, and I personally still have lost about $50,000.00 out of that entire endeavor of making that game. I’m glad that we did make that game, and I think it’s a great game, but we spent way too much money making it and it never made that money back. Developing more content for that game would be simply a fool’s errand for us at this point.
If we somehow have that happen with AVWW as well, then… well, a lot of my plans for post-1.0 work probably won’t materialize. But we’ll give it three months at least, and pack in a lot of free DLC during that time, to make sure that we give it a fair shot at succeeding if it has any chance of doing so.
But all of that is really very negative speculation: signs are excellent that AVWW is going to be our biggest hit yet, and absolutely blow AI War out of the water in terms of the audience it reaches. And if it does that, great — we’ll proceed as planned, and AVWW is going to go from massive to incredibly massive, same as AI War did between it’s 1.0 and 5.0 versions (all of which were free upgrades, by the way, released alongside the paid expansions).
On the other end of the spectrum, what if AVWW goes viral and gets super incredibly popular? AI War’s income will seem paltry and sparse at that point, right? And wouldn’t it be better just to let that game quietly die and focus on the big moneymaker at that stage?
Well, no — that’s how a “suit” thinks, isn’t it? I’m not a suit. If AVWW goes sky-high popular then that will certainly put more demands on our time because we’ll have a lot more fans to please all of a sudden. But that’s not going to mean we’re going to give up on AI War, or that we’re going to do lesser expansions for that game because of it. It just means we’ll have to work harder to divide our time effectively between the two, which I believe is something that Keith and I are equipped to do (especially with Erik handling PR and Josh helping so much with QA and support).
For Arcen, communication is really a key part of how we do business. Having an open development process has been a blessing and a curse — early on with AVWW, a lot of people thought we were crazy, but now it’s all coming together in a really positive way and there’s this great public record of how the game has evolved.
As we move forward toward AVWW’s 1.0 and beyond, that communication is going to be something we maintain. We’ll try to give you as accurate of updates as we can on the timing and plans for AI War’s expansions, and for the free DLC and paid expansions for AVWW.
You won’t ever wake up some day and hear “oh, by the way, the last-ever patch for AI War or AVWW was today.” You might someday hear “unless something changes to make this financially viable for us to continue, we’ve got three months left to work on patches for this or that game before we have to stop indefinitely with that title.”
If there’s anyone who was feeling doubtful in the wake of recent events, hopefully that helps to set some minds at ease. With regard to Arcen titles, at least!
As typically happens, the discussion about this has continued on our forums. Feel free to drop by to read or comment!