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this post was submitted on 24 Aug 2024
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There's plenty of room to monetize single player games when it's add-in content to games that you continually replay as opposed to add-on content for something that's story driven. More systemic games like Civilization, roguelikes, simulators, etc.
When your game isn't live service multiplayer, your incentives change to putting out more sequels rather than iterating on the same game. So your revenue per game goes down, but there's no reason it can't necessarily be as lucrative overall.
It's not confusion. Your perspective is survivorship bias. For every Rocket League, there are 10 Concords. That's why the entire industry is imploding right now. Everyone thinks their game will be Fortnite, but only so many games can be Fortnite, and a lot of that even comes down to luck, so you've got games like Avengers and Suicide Squad losing hundreds of millions of dollars each instead of making games for half or a quarter of their budgets that would have recouped their costs and then some.
Well then I guess your recommendation would be to keep trying to be Rocket League, even though statistically you're going to leave a crater in the ground formed by hundreds of millions of dollars and the better part of a decade of work? Keep in mind there are single player games that make more money than Rocket League too, if we're going to cherry pick.
Given the unfathomable number of layoffs we've seen the past two years, I think that's a difficult argument to make.