A Kickstarter project promises a remote control to control live insects (the RoboRoach).
Not exact matches
And according to an analysis of 47,188 randomly selected backers of successfully funded
projects 9 percent of the time a
Kickstarter campaign has reached its funding goal, the
project creators did not deliver the reward that was
promised.
Last year, Matt Hornbuckle and Kirk Keel launched a
Kickstarter project for a line of men's shirts called Stantt,
promising a better fit based on patent - pending DataFit technology.
It was in 2013 that, former President John Mahama visited the site and
promised to get it rehabilitated but the
project is yet to
kickstart.
It would also produce some very interesting data that might help
Kickstarter find out more about the riskiest
projects and how to help those creators think more thoroughly about what they are
promising.
This decision to stop printing physical books so far only extends to their boys» love and shoujo series, and is not affecting their
Project - H (hentai, 18 +) titles or the Osamu Tezuka books
promised via their
Kickstarter efforts.
While many like to claim that there is a legal case for a refund if a
project never comes to fruition, the fact is that
Kickstarter only state that
project creators must legally provide all rewards
promised to their backers, not the actual
project itself.
That's what's being
promised to us in The Mighty No. 9, a new
Kickstarter project by Kenji Inafune and his Comcept studio.
Live action role playing game, Werewolf: The Apocalypse, is looking extremely
promising on
Kickstarter after Ming's Eye Theatre (and their official publisher By Night Studios) raised over $ 70,000 for the
project with still over two weeks to go.
But, in the end, the game will not hit the console, and all money spent on their
kickstarter will not likely be back, since ks
projects are
promises not guaranteed to materialize.
We pledge to contribute 5 % of our profits from the sale of the game to other
promising game
projects on
Kickstarter and elsewhere.
A new
Kickstarter project by Original Gamesta (OG)
promises to be an industry - changing experience for mobile first person shooters.
The news comes after a tough few months for the studio following controversy over its crowdfunded god game Godus, with claims the studio was far away from fulfilling
promises it made during the
Kickstarter campaign for the
project.
Shovel Knight began as a modest, yet highly
promising Kickstarter project in March 2013.
The controversial
project is currently campaigning on
Kickstarter,
promising a spiritual successor to Eternal Darkness from the original developers.
But then on the other hand you have A Hat in Time, a
Kickstarter project that, with the
promise of bringing back the gameplay and magic of the classic Nintendo 64 - era titles such as Super Mario 64, The Legend of Zelda and Banjo - Kazooie, has managed to secure its funding in a really short amount of time.
We
Kickstarted our other
projects, reached our goals, shipped our rewards, and successfully delivered on what we
promised in a timely fashion while keeping our backers fully in the loop.
Code Hero, a game that
promised to teach people how to code their own video games, raked in $ 170,954 when the
project launched on
Kickstarter in 2012.
As of the time of this writing, the main
Kickstarter page for the
project still says that copies of the game should be delivered by December of 2017, though the specific wording used is «estimated delivery» which means that Nightdive technically isn't breaking any
promises by delaying the game.
Not very long ago, Lloyd told us about a
Kickstarter project that he backed for a wireless keyboard that took far longer to deliver than expected, and when it did, it was not what was
promised.