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#1
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As far as I could tell from participating in #INDIEpendenceDay, if you had around 10K downloads then it would make a worthwhile difference - as in some momentum would follow. However, I didn't stay free for long enough as downloads where estimated to be only 2k...so I settled for 1k and went back to paid.
Random: I wonder what will happen to this reply when your post probably gets moved to your epic thread PP
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#2
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For us this has tended to be way less effective than in previous years.
In 2010 and 2011, we tended to get a sustained uplift of 200%. This year, it tends to be closer to 50% and the dropoff back to the "equilibrium" is faster. So, it is still "worth it" depending on your goals, but you need to keep your expectations in check. |
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#3
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When I do the math on this, there's a divide by zero error lol
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#4
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I've wondered about this as well. I've recently set my games to FREE and seen a big up lift in downloads. However, the question is, do you leave it and go for brand awareness or try going back to paid and hope that people like your game enough to want to pay.
Their's so much psychology here. Do end users wait till it inevitably goes free? If their friend has the game for free, how likely would they be to pay? |
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#5
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Quote:
The big money is in games that are free all the time, as we've finally had to admit to ourselves for future business. |
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#6
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Quote:
If you have switched a game to free and it is doing a large number of downloads daily, I'd be tempted to continue to leave that free until the downloads settled down again. Difficult to say what that threshold is given it will be different for every developer and game (at PikPok, we kind of "feel" when it is the right time to switch back). |
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