Discussion place for the upcoming Stardock Magazine. Not a subscriber? Go here: https://www.stardock.com/subscribe/
I would be interested in the beta testing. If you need more people.
Hi Guys,
I would love to be considered for beta testing the new product as per your email.
Many Thanks
Andy
I would like to beta test the unannounced software that is a game that makes games.
I read betanews.com for new software and hardware new.
I would love to help with the beta testing.
I love the idea of the games within the games creation tool. In the past I've considered getting the ACE RPG maker; but in the end, from what I've read, I was a bit intimidated and was shakey on whether or not it would be a good investment for me. If your product helps a person learn how to do it, while they are doing it, as well as is approachable, I'd definitely be interested.
As for places I go for news on upcoming products, I go to Betanews, Majorgeeks, Ars Techana. I think a lot of people interested in getting new OS enhancements rely on these sites. I really don't know a means for getting to people who aren't in the know. I can only think of investing in advertising on the best known gaming sites, and general tech sites. I also do a fair bit of general searches for tech when I get an idea for something I wish I had, but don't know if it exists. I don't know how it could be accomplished, but paying to be first in search returns for products with the attributes Stardock meets would be another way of driving sales.
-Digicoma
I get most of my tech news from podcasts now. Indeed, magazines is where I used to get most of my computer/gaming information. MaximumPC and PCGamer were a couple I subscribed to. I miss magazines.
I would like to be part of the beta test for the game constructor, if it works on Mac (I work on Windows at work, but we only have Macs at home).
Yep, would love to beta-test 'The Video Game Machine'. Being a gamer for the last 30 plus years and a experienced beta tester for the same length of time.
I would love to Beta test a game that makes games. I was a kid in the 80's and plaid my fair share. I had a program on my Apple IIe that made games and at the time that was a blast so please consider me for Beta testing this!
That was an interesting magazine this month. I pre-ordered the Video Game Machine. I've always loved Stardock's games, so I'm really excited to see this game come to life and to get to help in that progress. The magazine made a very interesting point about how difficult it is to be in the loop for new software. I've been very frustrated with this in relation to software and technology. For instance, the "gadgets" section of Google News is 97% smartphone news. I want to know about real gadgets. Cool inventions and startups that nobody has heard about. I get everyone is dying to know what incremental update Apple will come out with this year so they can drop another $1k, but what about those of us that love gadgets? (And the Virtual Reality category has more articles relating to the OnePlus phone than VR.) And that is a shame. Take Groupy - had I not read this magazine, I'd never know about it. And this is something I've asked myself forever: Why doesn't Windows allow you to have tabs of different windows? It makes sense in a browser, so why not elsewhere? Luckily I am subscribed to this newsletter so I could buy Groupy. Otherwise, I'd still have a trillion things open. And to be honest, this makes much more sense from a productivity standpoint than multiple monitors.
All of the technology, gaming, and software websites have turned into largely mainstream trend websites (IGN, CNET, Download, etc.). There are other websites like G2Crowd, but the issue with them is that they tend to only have major publishers represented - and that means you'll never hear about the really cool software out there. I think the best way I learn about new programs is through tutorials for software. For instance, watching tutorials on Element 3D and other Video Copilot products led me to become a customer of Red Giant. Octane Render tutorials led to Substance. But, that isn't a very efficient way to learn about software and it isn't efficient for companies to find me as a customer.While this newsletter worked, I rarely read newsletters. There are a few I generally read like Stardock's or Red Giant's. The reason I skip most being I get thousands of newsletters.
Here is a proposed solution I'd like to see:Stardock...lol, creates a non-brand website. A website with a simple search field on the home page. It asks: What do you need to accomplish?
The user says what they want to do or what they're trying to find. And the website responds with options that the user can pick from. The website then gives them options based on that choice and this goes on a couple of turns. Then the user is shown 1 - 4 programs that meet all the criteria. And the user gets a free 30-day trial to each.
So, a software/game company would submit their product to this website. And the important thing here is that the submission needs to include really smart attributes that broadly define the software - and more importantly - narrowly defines it. That last part is critical. There are important attributes that separate Webflow, Wordpress, Dreamweaver, Visual Studio and Wappler. There are also important attributes that separate Unity from Unreal or Filemaker from Access. There are sites online that have a very limited version of this idea. For instance: Alternative.io or something like that. But all it does is show software based on generalized similarities. It is like game stores on your phone or Steam. What good is "Strategy" when you want something explicit like GalCiv? I think soft AI would be very useful in this.
I was going to do this. I had signed up for the beta of Lobe.ai. But they didn't think my idea was good enough for access. (And now Microsoft has bought them, so who knows what will come of it...). I get so frustrated trying to find good software that does exactly what I need. But I'm always having to conform to whatever I end up finding. And I can't be alone in this.My thought was, as I said, that the site could give an interview of sorts to find out what they want. And based on their choices, it gets more detailed in the questions to find out exactly what it is they're trying to accomplish. And the developer of the software just has to agree that users will get a 30-day trial, and that any sales generated will result in a small referral fee.Anyway, sorry so long. lol. I just feel that there is so much possibility out there with the software I don't know (or the games I've never heard of) - and think about this: How many titles aren't developed due to a developer having the fear of not being found?
I would definitely be interested in the game that makes games... Could I get in on the beta?
As for how I find out about software, it is usually from things I subscribe to, like Stardock mag, or Steam announcements or word of mouth.
For those interested in the The Video Games Machine you can find out more information here including how to join the founders program : https://forums.stardock.com/495012/now-announcing-the-video-game-machine---the-game-that-makes-games
I'm interested in beta testing. Old Atari 2400 and C64 user here. Anyone remember the C64 Construction Kits?
i am interested in the games that make games
can it help me to make something like master of orion?
if not, then it is too simple
i already have gamemaker studio
so any new game maker better be a whole lot magnitude better
Call on me call on me, Call on me, call on me, Call on me... I'm the same dev I used to be.
Call on me call on me,
Call on me, call on me,
Call on me... I'm the same dev I used to be.
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