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A report on Starship Rubicon's participation in a deep-discount bundle.
The hustle never ends.
Over the last month, we’ve done a couple of experiments in publicity. Starship Rubicon was in the Bundle Stars Trinity 3 Bundle, we run a couple of Steam Visibility Rounds, started releasing Steam Coupons, participated in the Steam Exploration Sale, and put out a demo. My notes ended up being longer than I expected, so I’ve split things up a bit. Here’s my take on how the bundle went:
We’ve gotten a handful of offers to be in bundles. For the most part, I see them as predatory not in our best interest.*
Christine Love said it best:
Please love yourself enough to not put your game on sale for 90% off, you can do better than that, I believe in you
— Christine Love (@christinelove) November 26, 2015
Enter Bundle Stars.
The pricing I saw was almost literally insane. When they contacted us, they were currently running an 8-game bundle for $1.99 (96% off) and were proposing that Rubicon be part of a 10-game bundle for $2.49 (98% off) at a 70% royalty rate. Jon somewhat incredulously asked how many sales they expected at that price:
I was intrigued: it still seemed like an interesting experiment. What would it look like if I got Rubicon into the hands of 10,000 people (albeit for basically free)? I wasn’t able to find any postmortems from devs who worked with them, but online traffic estimators put Bundle Star traffic between 100K and 1M views a month. So we bit, signed the contract, and handed over a buttload of Steam keys, and sat back.
> Duration: The bundle ran for two weeks, from Oct 28 – November 11.
> Sales: ~6,500 bundles. I don’t know what the deal with this was. They claimed that they expected to sell 12,000 – 20,000 units. Did they just egregiously overestimate? Was it as unexpected for them as it was for us to only move half of their lower bound? Disappointing, to say the least.
> Promotion: At some point, I realized it wasn’t in my interest to talk about the fact that the bundle existed. The primary value in participating in it was to reach people I couldn’t otherwise, and it would be better for me if anybody I could reach purchased the game for more than 16 cents.
I was hoping that getting it into a couple thousand more people’s hands (remember, we’ve only sold a couple hundred so far) would get people talking about it in non-Steam forums, tweets, anything. So far? Literally nothing. I suspect that bundling with so many other games actually was harmful, and that any attention it gets from a customer was (literally) decimated by the nine other games.
What’s more, of the few thousand that picked up the game, there was only a few-dozen-strong influx of actual players:
> Community: There was a small increase in the amount of tech supportthat cropped up on the Steam forums. People particularly seemed to demand better controller support, which up til that point wasn’t something I had focused on.
It was a little galling to have a few aggressive demands for features when they’d picked the game up for pennies, but respecting the feedback has made the game stronger.
> Key “Redistribution”: I didn’t know this, but apparently there’s a healthy market for people to trade/give away Steam keys. Dunno how I feel about this. I guess there’s not much of a difference between 16 cents and free, and I’d rather see somebody get the game and be enthusiastic about it (preferably somewhere publicly & searchable) than to see the key languish forever unplayed in somebody’s library.
On the other hand, it definitely seems skeezy for sites pick up an unused key on the cheap and then turn around and sell it for a tidy profit. But I guess that’d be fine to do if they were physical copies? Like I said, I’m conflicted.
> Overall: I mean, it was nice to get a couple thousand more people playing the game. But this kind of “deep discount” bundle is not something I would choose take part in again, especially if I didn’t have a day job.
I want to be clear that this isn’t meant to be a castigation of Bundle Stars specifically; besides the overestimation, they have been prompt & professional in communication and payment. And hey, it was a quick bundle of cash. Almost made a month’s rent.
That’s it! Let me know on Twitter or in the comments if you have any other questions about the experience.
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