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The World of Georic 1989-Present

Thursday, June 11, 2015

The FTC vs The Doom That Came to Atlantic City

In what should be the final page in the story, the Federal Trade Commission agreed to a settlement with Erik Chevalier, creator of Forking Path, the company responsible for the Doom that Came to Atlantic City Kickstarter.   The FTC suspended the $111,793.71 judgement against Chevalier, due to his inability to pay.

My regular readers know my opinion of this debacle, as I mentioned this as recently as this past Friday.    Outside of the 20 people who pledged $25 for a screensaver and a t-shirt, the other 1,226 people who participated should not be allowed near shell games, crane machines, or tropical beachfront timeshares near North Dakota.  Pledging the minimum (even a hefty $25) to support a project isn't done too often, but I'm a firm believer in the "If a thousand people just gave one dollar," school.   There are plenty of projects I pledge a dollar to, no matter how pie-in-the-sky the campaign is, just to follow updates and feel like I contributed something.    Many times, I'm happy to realize that a dollar was just enough. 

But those 1,226?  Those who were willing to pay $50+ for a Cthulhu-themed copy of Monopoly with very nice tokens/minis?   From a some mysterious person with apparently no experience making games?

I have zero sympathy.

I also have zero sympathy for Erik Chevalier, who essentially took the money and r....realized that using a Kickstarter to produce a game is hard... and using part of it to finance a lifestyle change is downright moronic.

And the $150+ level pledges, where rewards like "custom t-shirt" start showing up?    Are you really that dense that some fly-by-night operation is actually getting your game out, much less with the extra pewter minis, t-shirts, and original art ON THEIR FIRST KICKSTARTER EVER????

Do always order magazines with a credit card you give to the door to door salesman, or purchase meat from the trunks of cars?  I figured as such. 

This is not Reaper, nor Steve Jackson Games,  nor Monte Cook, nor Dwarven Forge that we're talking about.  Those are all well-established companies with wildly successful projects, and even they have setbacks and delays.  Palladium and Chaosium are long-standing companies with disastrous Kickstarters.  What valid reason, besides a need to burn money, would you throw your lot in with a stranger?

And this, my friends, is why we need big government to protect us.  If "educated" geeks can be taken for a ride this easily, think about those deemed less fortunate. 

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