this post was submitted on 23 Jun 2023
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How can you have 1000+ hours in a single game, work on a personal project for 10 months, spend 4 years writing a novel?

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[–] Saturdaycat@kbin.social 9 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I've been a co creator on a game that's been in the works for about 10 years now, we finally started making real progress 3 years ago. It requires so much research, planning, and many many drafts let alone future fine tuning. I had to get better at drawing, developing designs, research many things about what and why characters look like.

It's something that I do because I want to bring to life this project, and it's an active part of my life.

It takes a lot of steps, so it naturally became time consuming. I am still passionate today as I was 10 years ago when the project was just a pipe dream. It was a place to escape to, something personal to grow. It was fun as it was difficult to create something, so I would say it naturally became something that takes many years to truly come to life.

[–] dontforgetthat@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I started working on my first game about 6 months ago and I am still far from done. Game Dev takes waaay longer than I expected. Just wondering what is the game that you're working on? And any advice when it comes to marketing? I haven't marketed shit yet and I procrastinate everyday.

[–] Saturdaycat@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

It's actually a different sort of game than usual, it's more like a novel. It's a kinetic visual novel, so it's fairly simple and we're using RenPy- issue being to create the plot itself as we are making a sort of episodic series.

Marketing, well I've been trying to grow interest in my art and through that, interest in the novel by sharing the concept visual works as we go along. That way when we have something more firm I can share it with those who had already been interested in my art.

We don't really plan to make money off the game per se, but would just want the visual novel to be played and appreciated. I plan on making some merch for it as a way of support but since it's just me and my partner doing the work, it's our side passion project that we do secondary to our jobs

I think marketing wise, growing a community of interest is important, like whatever the type of game you're making, going in those spaces and getting familiar with fans of that type of game to generate interest