
Another route to success is to be on the ground floor of a worldwide sensation. Game-making software called Game Salad, created by local firm Gendai Games, powers 13 of the Top 100 paid games on the iPad. I know I'm not the first one to say it but App mania is out of control. If Skynet is really going to destroy the planet it will likely be because someone touched the Armageddon app while fumbling to spell "quince" in a heated game of Scrabble.
If you can't go viral or make a widely used tool for other people to make games, then you might have to sell out. I don't mean "sell out" in a bad way. Hell, if more people play your game, can selling your creative output really be that bad? Local developer MonkeyTrap Games showed off a demo version of a unicycle racing game at the Chronicle's Game On Austin event a few months back. Turns out that game has been chosen by the folks at Old Spice to be one of the finalists in their Old Spice Challenge. And while games associated with products are often lackluster, as I recall, the game had a simple elegance. Maybe not "elegance" but "shit-ton of fun" doesn't quite fit either. Let's say "straight-forward appeal." The game wasn't made with Old Spice in mind, but if you've got an Xbox 360 and an internet connection you can download Old Spice Racers for free and still remain your stinky self.
Local Gaming News, Splode beneath your Splosion, Slack Circus, Splosion Man, GameSalad, iPad, Old Spice Racers, Monkeytrap Games