Re: The active Kickstarter projects discussion thread.
Posted: Thu Jul 24, 2014 4:45 am
I wasn't a backer, but the news about Yogventures did bother me when I learned more about it. It seems clear, at least in hindsight, that the game they were promising was way too ambitious to be done for the budget they were asking, and with a pretty inexperienced team no less. The lead developer was trying to head this project while working another full time job, and this took so much of his time that he says his wife filed for a divorce. And when it all came crashing down, Yogscast tried to throw the developers under the bus as if they had nothing to do with the decisions leading up to this. Even while offering a different game, they said they weren't obligated to do anything. Watch GameSpot's Danny O'Dwyer if you want to get worked up about it too.
And I should probably just never read Youtube comments, but I wish people would stop saying that Kickstarter pledges are a donation and project creators have no actual obligation to fulfill their promises. Granted, there is, in practice, a risk of not getting what you paid for. But it is a legally binding contract, and the only way I know of for a company to be legally released from that obligation would be through bankruptcy. Which probably explains why Yogscast is so insistent that the legal responsibility lies solely with the developers.
And I should probably just never read Youtube comments, but I wish people would stop saying that Kickstarter pledges are a donation and project creators have no actual obligation to fulfill their promises. Granted, there is, in practice, a risk of not getting what you paid for. But it is a legally binding contract, and the only way I know of for a company to be legally released from that obligation would be through bankruptcy. Which probably explains why Yogscast is so insistent that the legal responsibility lies solely with the developers.