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Howdy Folks,

I’d like to talk to you about ABDL video games for a second.

Just in case y’all aren’t aware, Piece of Soap and I worked together to create the ABDL game  “Perpetual Change”.  If you haven’t tried it and you like my writing, you’re doing yourself a disservice by not googling it and taking the time to play it.  Because it’s my writing AND Soap’s art on a FINISHED video game that we worked together on..

If I don’t talk about it much, it’s literally because I thought everybody knew about it by now.

Now let me peel back the curtain and drop some history on y’all

When Soap and I started on that particular project, I was a full time teacher, part time writer.  It was a commission situation, financially, but creatively it developed into something of a partnership.

And yes, we had a lot of help from a lot of people. Soap commissioned other artists to do key scenes and stills, and hired someone to help with editing and to make the random bits of dialogue from all the non-named characters. But from pre-production on, Soap and I were the primary creative forces and contributors to that game.

We made a really good team. I’m really good at using my words to invest people emotionally and to misdirect and amuse, while Soap is practically a genius at what he does and creates poetry with his visuals and gameplay. We’re practically Penn & Teller but our magic is padded fan-service!

I love it, loved writing it, and was frankly AMAZED with how much detail he put into that game. You can only imagine how relieved and honored I was for him to ask me to continue working with him on a second game, called The Hive.  It’s a different system, a different feel, and a different story, but we’ve both learned so much since we started on Perpetual Change all those years ago.

Here’s the part that hurts to say: I’m a full time writer now, and as glamorous as I make it look sometimes, a niche writer doesn’t make as much money as a  public school teacher (a profession not known for its affluence).  I don’t want to raise my rates on THIS Patreon, either, because I can’t guarantee making more content that is significantly different from what I write.  That’s why my focus has always been trying to entertain and asking for your support.

Soap’s a full time Patreon artist, too.  Sometimes, he can’t afford to commission me or anybody else for that matter.  If you think I undersell myself, it is my honest and heartfelt opinion that Soap doesn’t fully know how amazing he is at what he does.

It can also be challenging to find a good balance on a collaboration, financially, when the collaboration is entirely on just one of the collaborator’s Patreon amidst tons of their other amazing creative works. 

Soap puts all of his video game content on his Patreon alongside his fantastic original artwork, fanart, and comics for the obscenely low price of just one dollar.  It literally only costs someone 12 dollars a year to get access to ALL of that.

It’s difficult to determine who is subscribing for what and where the interest lies.

He originally had a Patreon called ABGames, but he shut it down and folded it into his main Patreon.  We would like to re-start the ABGames Patreon and move all future work on The Hive over to that site instead.

In doing so, we would be able to ask for support directly for that particular project as well as any other video game collaborations going forward and then share the profits with one another.  Ideally, this would enable Piece of Soap to not have to commission me  and would let me write for The Hive more often.  Hopefully, it will also create extra funds so that it is easier to commission additional artists where desired.

And as much as it makes sense, financially, and it would help us a great deal, we’re worried. We certainly don’t want to ask too much of you in your support or to feel like we’re taking advantage of anyone. 

Things are just getting more expensive these days, and a video game charging 12 dollars a year per person COMBINED with all of Soap’s other remarkable work is criminally inexpensive in my opinion. We are still committed to making the best ABDL Video Game content that we can.  We just don’t want to take advantage of you.  If anything, we need your help. It's a balancing act.

Please give us your feedback and opinions.  We want to be competitive with other niche video game Patreons, but still give you the best value while still being fair to our own needs.  Considering the quality of the art and writing, what do you feel would be a reasonable asking price each month in support of a game like The Hive?

Comments

Anonymous

Surprisingly enough it really seems like good ABDL games are some what rare. Lots of them just stop being updated out of the blue, some are poorly written or impossible to play (because the game itself is broken or otherwise) and just can be a struggle to find. Honestly there seems to be only a few ABDL games out there that I'm able to keep an eye on because those ones haven't dropped off just yet, and I'd love for this to be one I can actually invest in too! I could see myself easily paying around $8 a month for a game with your writing and as long as the game runs I think I'd play it. :) You have a real talent that would be amazing to see on the game market and with this niche of interest that makes me just more willing to invest. You really have two sides of a coin here on obscure kink, for some people it's worth it and for others it's just ain't enough to be worth it yet. As the game develops more people will be drawn to invest, especially if these updates are fulfilling enough each time for the players to feel a difference, I'd recommend checking out how the developer of Lilith's Throne does thier updates as an example. That's a game that has some obscure kink in it as well to a degree and it's also a game I'm just not able to justify paying $8 a month for too.

RhoBean

I’ve actively questioned soap on why they only have the one dollar tier, that always seemed insane to me, you two are like my absolute favorites in this genre for your respective mediums. But soap is insistent on not offering larger tiers.