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  • Where can I sell my PC Indie game?
  • by Rebecca
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  • In an effort to increase our sales numbers we are looking into all the different places that we can sell Triangle Man. Before starting this research I had no idea that there were so many different online distribution channels for PC games. It has been really difficult to gather this info – there wasn’t a nice central location where I could find it all (though this blog post was amazingly helpful, and inspired mine).   So, I thought it would be a pretty good idea to share this info and save you all some time. This is for Windows PC games only, since that is what Triangle Man is. I didn’t cover sites like Kongregate or other browser based games sites. Someone did point me towards a site called Gumroad which lets users sell their products without a store. All they need to do is share a link with users. If we ever decide to sell from our website, then this is something we’d probably utilise. Update: I was also contacted by the developers from IndieGameStand which is a site that sells a different indie game every 4 days – they have a Pay What You Want model, plus a percentage [...]

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Convict Blogs

  • Marketing Survey Analysis by Barnesy
  • About two & a half weeks ago I launched a survey to try and help us figure out how we can improve our current marketing strategies, as well as look into the possibility of new areas to expand our strategies. There were a total of 12 questions in the survey [...]
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  • Brief update by Rebecca
  • Well, we’ve had another quiet week – still waiting on artwork and just fixing bugs and minor design flaws here and there. I spent a day getting the old version of Triangle Man ready for distribution via an initiative that we actually ended up missing out on. I’m contemplating whether [...]
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  • Why (Not To) Have A Yellow Protagonist by TiMMy
  •   Recently, for a project, I performed a little research into colour psychology, namely how certain colours affect or elicit certain emotions. The most interesting correlation states that while yellow is perceived as a warm and happy colour, long exposure causes it become irritating or frustrating to the viewer. The irony is [...]
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