Bloodstained new final stretch goal is now boss revenge mode
Added: 12.06.2015 22:16 | 1 views | 0 comments
NE:
Well, so much for the roguelike dungeon being Bloodstaineds final Kickstarter stretch goal! With just six hours remaining, the team has added in one final target. If funds reach $5.5 million, Bloodstained will be receiving a boss revenge mode.
From:
n4g.com
| New Sprked Website Hopes To Revive Paid Mods
Added: 12.06.2015 21:16 | 0 views | 0 comments
Sprked hopes to be the Kickstarter of paid mods. Will it please the modding community?
From:
n4g.com
| Bloodstained becomes most Kickstarted game ever
Added: 12.06.2015 20:19 | 1 views | 0 comments
Crowd funding has really changed the face of games development in recent years. Thanks to the money of hard working...
From:
megagames.com
| Bloodstained: Ritual of the Night Breaks Kickstarter Record
Added: 12.06.2015 20:00 | 0 views | 0 comments
The project has amassed $4.9 million with a few hours still left to go.
From:
www.ign.com
| Kickstarter Scammers, Beware: FTC Now Taking Legal Action Against Misuse of Funds
Added: 12.06.2015 18:13 | 4 views | 0 comments
One of the main concerns with crowdfunding websites like Kickstarter is the uncertainty surrounding the use of funds after a campaign ends. Once people give money toward a Kickstarter, they want the product to actually come to fruition. While people who run Kickstarter campaigns are bound by the terms and rules of Kickstarter, sometimes funds are misused. Now, however, the Federal Trade Commission has decided to take action in at least one of these cases. A 2012 Kickstarter for a board game called The Doom That Came to Atlantic City succeeded in raising over $120,000, significantly more than its $35,000 goal, but the creator of the game ended up using the money on personal expenses rather than making the game. After fourteen months, he abruptly canceled the project and didn't fulfill all of the backer rewards. Recently, the FTC decided that this violated the law and filed a complaint with a federal court. , and several suspicious campaigns, so it is good that the FTC is attempting to stop such wrongful spending.
From:
www.gamespot.com
| Kickstarter Scammers, Beware: FTC Now Taking Legal Action Against Misuse of Funds
Added: 12.06.2015 18:13 | 1 views | 0 comments
One of the main concerns with crowdfunding websites like Kickstarter is the uncertainty surrounding the use of funds after a campaign ends. Once people give money toward a Kickstarter, they want the product to actually come to fruition. While people who run Kickstarter campaigns are bound by the terms and rules of Kickstarter, sometimes funds are misused. Now, however, the Federal Trade Commission has decided to take action in at least one of these cases. A 2012 Kickstarter for a board game called The Doom That Came to Atlantic City succeeded in raising over $120,000, significantly more than its $35,000 goal, but the creator of the game ended up using the money on personal expenses rather than making the game. After fourteen months, he abruptly canceled the project and didn't fulfill all of the backer rewards. Recently, the FTC decided that this violated the law and filed a complaint with a federal court. , and several suspicious campaigns, so it is good that the FTC is attempting to stop such wrongful spending.
From:
www.gamespot.com
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