GAMING ADVICE WITH PROFESSOR KNOW-IT-ALL: HOW TO BECOME A SOMEBODY IN THE GAMING COMMUNITY AND GET MORE GROUPIES

Get active! Get involved! DO SOMETHING!

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  • 12/13/2013 04:45 AM
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Good day, ladies and gentlederps. The name is Professor Know-It-All. And I’m here today to teach you all about the secret art of game making and general game design. You can just call me “The Professor” for short, considering that’s what most people call me around here. For the next ten minutes, or however long it takes you to read all of this, I will be sharing my wisdom of many years of game making experience with you all. Although my speculative advice may come free and is considered well-informed by most, please take into the account that even I, the great and mighty professor can sometimes be faulty. So make sure that you have a clear head that is full of common sense and a willingness to go beyond the boundaries of knowledge as we take a look at today’s informal lesson.




“Thank you for going out of your way and submitting a review for my game!”
“I just did it for the bitches.”


Congratulations, good man. By directing your time and efforts from working on the next killer app for an old engine that nobody has used since 1997, you’ve just made someone’s day and given yourself a couple of points in overall community service! Now don’t you feel all warm and accomplished inside?

Now for the most of you sitting in the back row with your precious MP3 players cranked up to the max – “Professor,” you say, “what does this have to do with game making?” Well, I’m very glad you all asked that question. For you see, game making isn’t all about spending the entire duration on your comfy butt slaving away over tweaking the same sprite over and over again – oh no! It’s also about establishing your sexy persona all over the Internet to market yourself to other nerds and nerdettes. You can make the most impressive piece of ass all you want with your sleek menu design, parallax mapping, and yada-yada-yada, but the most important thing is to paint a respectable image of yourself on to others. Just simply joining an indie community and posting your game and precious screenshots of you failing on the same boss fight over and over again isn’t going to cut it! You need to get your feet wet and do something for them for a change. It’s the same classic expression: you scratch their butt, they’ll scratch yours.

“But Professor,” you may ask, “why should I help them when they’re supposedly the scum of the Earth!?” Well…technically they are, but at the sametime, you have to work together in order to compete against each other. Just simply being a confident loner isn’t going to cut it in today’s heavily relied social media world. You need to do something to become something. And I know just the ticket.

The left subject, which is you, probably, has just managed to stumble upon a person’s game page that they just recently submitted. It looks pretty cool, I guess, but nothing like yours - but who cares!? You just want to reach out to somebody, give them a slight jolt of praise, and then hopefully gain a new member for team you. Let’s see how it goes.




SUCCESS!!!


Now that user will probably tell his or her other virtual friends and that person will tell theirs and so and so on. The point is, by reaching out to this other young man and putting on a brave courageous face, he was not able to garner more attention towards his own games but also put on a clever marketing disguise. Don’t ever underestimate the power of marketing…and sex appeal.

But there are many other ways you can create more well awareness of yourself around the community that just is not limited towards doing comments or reviews. There’s a brave whole world out there for you. For starters, there are the community forums where people go to frolic and comingle about the latest DLC pack for the latest MMO RPG game. Even if you don’t play that sort of junk (or even remotely care), you can still comment on other things and give yourself a voice to be heard. You can also create your own topics as well. What exactly does all of this do? It gets you more noticed with your bright shiny username for all to see. Out of all the visitors that come to that particular gaming site, someone might click on your profile and check out all your stuff because they see that you're quit active in the community. All it takes it just one click to become insta-famous!

If the forums and commenting isn’t your thing – what about posting up some reviews, let’s plays or create some sexy fanart for someone, especially fanart if you’re an awe-inspiring artist. Other lurkers might see your freshly hand drawn creations or your incredible video editing skills and might give you a like. You see, it pays to be a team player. By getting involved in your community, you’ll get more popular, more noticed, and more fans coming on to you (ew…) Just joining alone and making the odd post here or there won’t necessary cut it. If you want to be a superstar, you gotta put in the work to become that superstar, not just on your own projects, but on your own fanbase as well. It may not occur to you, but someone out there is a person who is rather fond of your work, don’t let anyone tell you otherwise. And as long as you have that one person that’s drawing interest, you have done your job.

You don’t need to contribute something all the time; just take it slow and do what you can. If possible, try to contribute a few things on the other indie game sites you want to post your game up on too. The more attention that you give others, the more that you will receive back in good nature. So – go ahead! Write a review for someone; draw that sexy piece of fan art of the main character that you've always wanted to do; compete in a game making contest...the more you contribute, the more people will be drawn to you and your many kind deeds, which will generate into a healthy amount of downloads and word of mouth for you. By coming together, you can do better on both fronts. And who knows!? Maybe you might meet that special someone who you can help or they might be able to help you out with your own games, especially the parts you’re the weakest at, and then you’ll start making some true killer apps.

So what are you waiting for!? Get your ass out the door and start contributing! I would contribute too if I wasn’t making less than minimum wage on a teaching salary.

(Please don’t tell the dean that I said that.)



Class dismissed.

Posts

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Another way to do it is to become an administrator, then take advantage of the power to showcase your projects on the frontpage.
author=kentona
Another way to do it is to become an administrator, then take advantage of the power to showcase your projects on the frontpage.

You so bad.
Not really
author=kentona
Another way to do it is to become an administrator, then take advantage of the power to showcase your projects on the frontpage.


Yeah, but that will take forever...

(BTW, one of these days, you should have all your games up as gamespots features at the exact same time and, if somebody ever happens to complain about it, just say that it's “Appreciate Kentona Day,” or something like that. ^^)
edchuy
You the practice of self-promotion
1624
author=Clareain_Christopher
author=kentona
Another way to do it is to become an administrator, then take advantage of the power to showcase your projects on the frontpage.
You so bad.
Not really


You the practice of self-promotion ... our beloved politicians and megacorporations are really masters @ it. And yeah, just because you did doesn't mean we can't give you a hard time about it (I think most people probably just gloss over RMN's main page, so it's no biggie unless something deserving gets squeezed out).
This is the part of "gamemaking" I just can't bring myself to do. I don't mind giving other peoples games compliments, but doing it to get them to play my game? Not going to happen.
Seiromem
I would have more makerscore If I did things.
6375
I did step 3 once.

I still haven't finished that review.
Ciel
an aristocrat of rpgmaker culture
367
i love you brent
Ratty524
The 524 is for 524 Stone Crabs
12986
Great read. I think I make too many idiotic comments on people's screenshots. That's why I'm not that famous. :P
Yeah, but it’s fun to make idiotic comments on people’s screenshots sometimes!

Also, hi, Ciel! :D *waves back*
iddalai
RPG Maker 2k/2k3 for life, baby!!
1194
So if everyone followed this, we'd have a community filled with empty praise, fake intentions, favor reviews and lying suck ups.

author=iddalai
So if everyone followed this, we'd have a community filled with empty praise, fake intentions, favor reviews and lying suck ups.

That's a good point, though you're counting on a lot of people following this to extreme levels. Nothing is good when we have too much of it.

Also, I rather have a community full of bad Marketers, than a dead community where people post their gams and leave.
author=iddalai
So if everyone followed this, we'd have a community filled with empty praise, fake intentions, favor reviews and lying suck ups.


I never said that it was going to be easy. ;)
I love the article. As a fresh and open new person into a gaming creation world, I want to start somewhere. This article is very fantastic. =D
author=iddalai
So if everyone followed this, we'd have a community filled with empty praise, fake intentions, favor reviews and lying suck ups.



The real trick about praise and any form of positive banter in general is - you don't have to fake it. You should do it honestly.

It's about telling what you actually think, but usually keep to yourself.

Find some page you like, which you will if you keep an eye open. And just make some contact. If you like the people, go ahead and do more. It's all about getting out of your own head for a moment.
Conversation or honest compliments work the same way. You don't say standard stuff, instead you train yourself to look for things you like and then are able to point them out.
author=Kylaila
author=iddalai
So if everyone followed this, we'd have a community filled with empty praise, fake intentions, favor reviews and lying suck ups.

The real trick about praise and any form of positive banter in general is - you don't have to fake it. You should do it honestly.

It's about telling what you actually think, but usually keep to yourself.

Find some page you like, which you will if you keep an eye open. And just make some contact. If you like the people, go ahead and do more. It's all about getting out of your own head for a moment.
Conversation or honest compliments work the same way. You don't say standard stuff, instead you train yourself to look for things you like and then are able to point them out.

True that! I believe that we don't have to kiss butt all the time. For myself, I would rather be honest and tell people how I feel about their games. I really like to keep thing to myself. LOL
This is a good post. And yes! It's more about giving compliments that you normally would keep in your head and reaching out to those people you usually wouldn't try to talk to; not doing it empty-ly (how do adverbs :/) but just going out and making connections with people you admire.
I think we could all use this advice. :0
Ratty524
The 524 is for 524 Stone Crabs
12986
I could use some groupies. There are actually many people here that I like, but I'm too shy to actually push towards a friendship with them.
unity
You're magical to me.
12540
author=Ratty524
I could use some groupies. There are actually many people here that I like, but I'm too shy to actually push towards a friendship with them.


I could be a groupie! :D I really enjoyed Sellsword and Tina of the Stars, and have been meaning to check out more of your games ^_^
Drop a pm REQUESTING CHEERLEADERS, and you are good to go.

Seriously :) You are a cool army, go get some more generals.
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