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RedKingXIII said:

Alan Wake 2 didn't flop because it was "woke" or something like that, that's bullshit. I'll just copy and past what I said in another thread:

-It's a sequel that came out 10 years after the first game, which wasn't even that successful
-No physical release on consoles (it's coming now but I'm wondering if it's too late)
-It's exclusive to the Epic Store on PC, and I'm not sure if it's ever coming to Steam, considering Epic funded and published the game
-It released very close to Spiderman 2 on PS5 (It came out a week later)
-It's a survival horror game and if you're not called Resident Evil that's a tough genre to sell

With all of that said, did Concord really flop because it's woke? It seems one of these cases where something flopped for a number of reasons and a certain group just says it's a woke game because... reasons? What's so woke about Concord to make it fail that hard?

It's just a unappealing product in a very crowded market where the other games from the same genre are free to play. It also released on a terrible release date so close to Wukong. I feel like there was also 0 marketing for it, I didn't even knew this game released

Yup. Though I'm not sure I'd describe Alan Wake 2 as a "flop" even, I think it will eventually turn a profit.

For Remedy though...I'm sure they're happy for the most part, Epic funded 100% of development for years, including the salaries of their employees, technically, Remedy hasn't lost any money on Alan Wake 2, only Epic has (thus far) but it may still sell enough to start turning a profit.

Epic's deal is 100% funding for everything, the development, the marketing, the salaries, and only when the game meets enough sales to recoup that 100% do Epic start sharing profits at a 50/50 split. I believe that Alan Wake 2 will eventually reach that. It's not a massive seller out the gate, like Alan Wake 1, it's a slow burner but it's currently selling faster than Alan Wake 1.

But Remedy, they had their entire game funded and they had their salaries covered for years, they didn't lose money on Alan Wake 2, they got to make the game they wanted and keep all IP rights. Meanwhile they have other games which continue to sell and other publisher agreements to work on, that's often the life of an independent developer, working from publisher to publisher.

But yeah, Alan Wake IP is what I'd call a "average" seller anyway, it was never a big selling IP.

Anyway, the fans still enjoyed it and it won a lot of critical acclaim.

Last edited by Ryuu96 - on 27 August 2024