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Q1SP Indiegogo Project
I have been thinking about this idea for some time now and I am curious to know what people think. Would anyone be interested in a professional quality funded Q1SP map by me? (Example - Zendar / Ivory)

Is there enough people interested? I assume a lot of people played my previous maps but did not comment so here's the chance, forum lurkers, what do you think?

I was thinking over a 6 week time frame with different donations getting different perks, like the chance to include your own idea of a secret in the map, access to the dev map files, vote on theme or map name?

Any thoughts?
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I think sock just wants to make Quake maps, but his time is at a premium (I assume he does contract development, or similar) and thus he was looking for an avenue to ease the financial pain of the time investment needed to fulfill that desire. This is just a theory though.

We all need to get by, we all want to do particular things and sometimes those particular things take a lot of time (mapping being a good example, particularly at the quality level sock delivers). I doubt I would make a donation due to my own financial situation, but I would applaud sock if he were able to fund the time investment made into Quake mapping. And I would get another awesome Quake map out of it.

Refreshed and saw more comments:
Donate buttons are awesome, it lets people who have some free finances easily support the content that they like, but doesn't encourage an expectation of compensation for community activities. 
 
I don't think that donate buttons work. I had zero donations from the button at Quaddicted. All donations came directly from the active fund drive. 
Long Story Short 
I produced 4 pro quality maps to learn some new level design tricks and I had a blast making them. I said I was not going to make anymore and some friends said they wanted more and would offer donations, so I thought why not, a little bit of cash for some quality maps should ok, lets see if anyone else is interested? There is no hidden agenda or refusing to make maps unless I get paid.

@Willem, I am not holding the community to ransom, I am just responding to what people have said, they like my stuff and are willing to pay to see more of it. The whole "It's a bad precedent" is dramatic and misleading, if you don't like something then don't pay for it!

@RickT23, not sure why you are flaming this thread with comparisons to F2P games or that you are outraged about paying someone to make something you enjoy. I am assuming you played all my maps and enjoyed them! I think everyone here understands your viewpoint, multiple times. 
 
"The whole "It's a bad precedent" is dramatic and misleading, if you don't like something then don't pay for it!"

It's not dramatic. If people don't pay, that content doesn't get made, and that starts a negative spiral.

I'm not trying to target you, I think you're a good guy and have done some great stuff. However, I think gathering up cash before being willing to make maps is ultimately going to be bad for the future of a mapping community.

That's all. 
 
"I don't think that donate buttons work. I had zero donations from the button at Quaddicted. All donations came directly from the active fund drive."

I agree and putting one on the download page is even worse. Even if you LOVE the map, what are the odds of you going back to the web page to click the Donate button? Almost zip. 
Sock 
I think you should nevermind this thread and just go for it. Worst case scenario, it won't work out and no one will lose money. 
 
I'm generally negative on this for a few reasons:

First as others have mentioned it seems to go against the spirit of the community which is people creating levels for love of the craft, and giving them away. In theory, other people in the community repay you by making their own levels and then everyone effectively gets hundreds of free levels in payment for the 1 level they made. Obviously some people don't make maps, but play them, so they get a free lunch, but then again some of those people make websites or editors or engines, and that is how they pay back the community. It's a bit communist because people pay into the community based on how much they are able to -- people with fewer real life obligations can obviously donate more of their time and energy.

I also don't see how anyone can get a decent hourly rate mapping for an audience of a few hundred, unless each donor puts in a lot of money. Perhaps sock is very efficient (he did produce like 4-5 maps in one year) and maybe those maps only took a few weeks of his time, but I'm not sure that he can expect to actually earn a living wage from quake mapping. So if it's not to make a living, is the money just symbolic? (obviously this is up to sock whether the economics make sense, but other people are throwing around terms like "if he wants to make a living on quake maps, more power to him!" etc. which assumes a lot about the volume of money involved.)

Also I wonder if this idea is sustainable. Question was stated "would you pay some money for a new sock map" but the follow-on question is "how often would you be willing to do it again for another map?" If all maps were paid maps, would you buy 1 map a year? 10 maps a year?

Finally I hope this idea doesn't alter people's attitudes towards making maps and playing maps. When you look at a lot of professional and end-user game reviews, they seem to be all about "was this game worth the money" instead of just talking about the game on its merits. I hope that quake map reviews and feedback don't devolve into the same "This level was too short for a $10 level" etc.

As a counter-proposal, I feel more positive about paying for new models, sounds, and textures (also tools, engines), released either GPL or public domain, any of which have a longer-lasting benefit to the community. For example a set of faithful replacement models would benefit everyone permanently. Or new monsters that are at high quality and can be used in many maps. 
 
Why aren't you doing any more q1sp's sock? What are you going to do now? 
Metlslime 
Bit of a tangent, but this caught my eye:
"When you look at a lot of professional and end-user game reviews, they seem to be all about "was this game worth the money" instead of just talking about the game on its merits."

At TruePCGaming, the reviews we write always culminate in that actually, literally the final paragraph has a header of "Conclusion - Is it worth the money?" because the reviews are written from a consumer advocacy perspective rather than a ludological angle, which stems partially from the fact that so many PC games are bad ports these days so it is a valid concern. It comes from "Regardless of how well designed this game might be, it performs poorly/crashes all the time/has dreadful controls/has a constrictive FOV you can't change" (and why we have in the Technical Summary, an FOV Slider bit).

On the subject, I agree with what you are saying, at the same time I don't feel negative toward sock's idea, I guess I just view it as more of a mixed economy.

I do hope we see more work from sock though. 
What Otp Said 
 
 
others have said this better than i but since you specifically asked:
i would not pay. i strongly believe that modding should be free. 
I Would Donate If: 
the ogres wore sexy stockings and were underage 
Sorry Sock You Misunderstood Me. 
When I said "please make them work with Darkplaces", I didn't mean HD or flashy assets. I like quake as it is well enough, except for blocky blood particles. It just so happens that darkplaces is my favorite engine for its versatility and proper blood particles (what I miss most when using fitzquake and its derivatives), and your past work doesn't work very well with it. For example, at the final arena of Ivory Tower, if you are using darkplaces, the ogres would not show up as intended when you enter by using the lift, but remain hidden and still able to toss grenades at you. I am writing this from my memory only, so it might not be Ivory Tower but another excellent map of yours. It's the one with the said final arena where you use buttons to crush enemies and three or so ogres and then vores and multiple knights and hell knights would appear to give you a good time.

--------------
in response to "@doomer, I can certainly create a rtlight file, include some extra shaders for liquids and setup some particles but I have no plans to create full HD assets." 
I'm Very Interested 
Sock, your point surely fits well in the Quake world, here's my thoughts:

-First, yes I'd pay but only for a consistent release such 1 or 2 episodes, possibly something as Nehahra eheh

-Curious what Carmack/Id could say about from a legal point of view.. anyway it's a donation fee we're talking or not ?

-I don't know if sites like Kickstarter are viable options legally speaking because you're selling a game based on a proprietary engine except in case of a true total conversion (that's the way I'd choose myself) 
 
+1 to metlslime's comment, very closely mirrors my own feelings.

I don't think I would donate towards a single map being made, even at the high quality that sock makes his at. I prefer the Quake community as non-commercial, especially since it's been that way for so long. I also don't think there is enough wide appeal that you would get much more than a couple hundred bucks and would mostly just serve to create unreasonable expectations for that map.

Not a fan of Kickstarter or other such methods of 'the consumer pays before completion' in general anyway. I'm not against helping out a friend who needs and asks for help... but as a general method of funding in game dev at large, I hate them. 
I Can Understand Both Sides Of The Argument 
except ricky's first post :)

Although I think people worrying about the legal side of things are thinking too hard. It's a 17 yr old game and regardless of whether there is any legal implications (and I think those are debateable anyway), they would never be enforced.

But even though I would be persoanlly happy to contribute, I do understand the points raised by willem, metl et al. 
 
"As a counter-proposal, I feel more positive about paying for new models, sounds, and textures (also tools, engines), released either GPL or public domain, any of which have a longer-lasting benefit to the community. For example a set of faithful replacement models would benefit everyone permanently. Or new monsters that are at high quality and can be used in many maps. "

I have an idea of recreating Chasm the Rift's monsters and weapons in Quake as a Quoth like Pack. Action Forms is dead so there are no legal issues. How much money is fair for something like this? Would really like to see Chasm live on in Quake. 
@sock 
Seeking public consensus is the wrong way to go.

Everyone rejects new ideas because they are new and people don't like change.

The demographic you would need to target isn't the one here. Minecraft, Candy Crush, Flappy Bird, World of Warcraft show that this can be done. There might even be Steam examples -- Team Fortress 2 generates a ton of purchases of extra items and such.

However, one real problem is targeting the audience you are looking for a game ...

1) That isn't free.
2) For a game that is not phone/tablet friendly.
3) For a game that isn't hooked up to Steam API if you wanted to target desktop.
4) For a game that is very poorly packaged on Steam --- it requires going outside Steam to find a modern engine (as far as I know).

The idea is sound. And should be how the world works! But when something is fucked up and isn't ideal, you have to look at why.

And that tangled mess is staring you in the face.

Maybe you "wage war against a sea of troubles, and by confronting them --- end them" (notice cool use of Shakespeare I stuck in there, awesome Baker +3).

But taking that on is a major undertaking. Probably not the one you are looking for.

/Tosses ijed and Spike a "nickel".

[When you are looking to do "change", never ask for permission. Except if you are asking "permission" with the intent to run objectors over with bulldozer and point them out as examples of "losers" to look cool because you already were doing it and wanted noisy volunteers to serve as comic relief.] 
Okay That Is Now 2 Posts 
I dont understand :) 
 
I don't think I'd pay for a single map, however I would gladly give you dosh for ITS. 
A Thought 
well the idea of a spiritual sequel to Quake has been floating around here for a while; I think the proposal for a Quake-like modern standalone game, which could be based on Quake technology, makes a lot more sense as something people would pay for (and presumably not just the Quake community, but gamers more generally), since it would be perceived as a game rather than a mod. If people really got their act together, it could be on Steam, and it could load or support previous custom Q1SP levels.

Interesting discussion; so far I think metlslime's post was the most insightful. 
 
what the hell is ITS?

re poor distribution of quake on steam, the entire game is small enough that you could just make it standalone, if it was an episode. not sure of the legal ramifications. 
 
Will I Pay For A Map ?? 
No...

As other mentioned already, I will not donate for a map, neither for a set of maps, even if those have professional looks.

I think Quake mapping needs to remain a hobby. Involving some "commercial" or "financial" aspects lead to transform your hobby into your "job", and this changes the picture radically IMHO (pressure vs pleasure essentially).

We have seen in the past some fantastic packs (e.g Travail, Beyond Beliefs, Zerstorer, etc...) or mods (e.g Quoth) made by hobbyists.. so why should we start funding one know ? All those have been created by volunteers, by fans, by passionate guys that love Quake, and that were just looking to keep our community alive, and give fun to the players, and have fun to create something different and new (Note I am not sure whether they have been funded to be honest, but what I am sure is that despite the fact we have wait for sometimes year those packs/mods are awesome).

I admit we have less and less new things since several years, but that's the life of any game: it has to be forgotten at some points.. I am not sure either but look at the Doom community (I am talking about the former Doom/Doom2).. how many people are still playing mapping for this game now ? Almost less than for Quake I guess... though... but I guess you can count them on your two hands, as we can count us here.
That's inevitable..

Anyway, sock you have certainly some good intentions there, and I wish you all the best for your project.

Keep it up ! 
77 
oh of course 
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