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Experience sci-fi tactical combat and exploration in a procedural world that combines traditional roguelikes with an immersive modern interface like no other. Build yourself from components found or salvaged from other robots. Attach power sources, propulsion units, utilities, and weapons to become a slow tank bristling with weapons, or a fast-moving flier zipping past enemies before they even have time to react, or a stealthy sword-wielding assassin/hacker, or whatever else you can come up with from the salvage you find. The situation can quickly change as you lose components and rebuild yourself from enemy remains. You are the Cogmind. Discover what that means as you explore a living, breathing world ruled by robots.

Report RSS Cogmind, 1 Year of Alphas

A summary of Cogmind's first year of sales, including basic player and revenue data, a breakdown of development time, and a quick look at the rest of 2016.

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Cogmind Alpha Access is one year old! (One could optionally end this sentence with "!?!?")

"Year 1" since release in May 2015 overlaps with some previous postmortems I've done, so rather than rehash that content here I'll just be linking to it where appropriate. That said, there is plenty of fresh data to share, too :)

The Year 2 of the Cogmind recap is a pretty good general summary of 2015, something I'll do again at the end of this year. Since then a lot of the work has gone towards overhauling a few mechanics to improve gameplay, and adding more and more content to complete the full world as planned. So, yeah, eight major releases later Cogmind development is still rolling along.

Today though I'd like to focus more on sales and other aspects specific to the alpha which haven't been covered as much before.

Also, this week I'll be updating the Cogmind website's text and all screenshots. Here are some of the scenes I've been working with for the new site:

cogmind_destruction_composite

Composite gif featuring gratuitous ASCII destruction.


cogmind_explosion_reactor_array

Still of that reactor array exploding. (Click here for separate full-view image.)


On to the data...

Players

As of today Cogmind has 2,119 players. Or maybe that's "players," because in reality the majority would be better classified as supporters at the moment, i.e. those who joined the alpha program to help the project see 1.0, and maybe try it out every so often before then, or just wait.

There are also an additional 738 people on a special one-time mailing list accessible at the top-right of the buy page, to be notified when Cogmind reaches its intended lower base price (for those who can't afford to chip in now, or who simply want a lower price for whatever reason). Of course, a number of those people may have signed up earlier and eventually bought anyway, and another portion will never see an email because it'll end up in their spam box :P

In terms of active players, based on the uploaded game stats there are usually about 20 runs played per day, though that number has fallen in recent months as sales have started to decline somewhat, something you'll see further down. However, the caveat there is that I don't actually know everyone who's playing, only those who opt in to data uploading via the options menu (I do know that not everyone opts in). The active player count is naturally above average in the week after a new release.

Many thanks to the core group of players who have been a continuous help when it comes to providing feedback on each release--zxc, Happylisk, Decker, Sherlockkat, Shobalk, and more have stuck with it for a long time and have helped improve the game for everyone. Even others who simply talk about their experiences give me a lot to go on when I consider balance and potential features, revealing any disparities between the intended vs. perceived vs. actual effects of any changes.

Revenue

I'm not broke yet!

If you'd like detailed coverage of the first month of sales and other data and issues surrounding launch, you can read my in-depth postmortem here. Crazy and exciting times, that first month :D

But that was only a month, and there have been eleven more since then :P

On the funding side those eleven months have been noticeably less exciting, though there were a few unexpected sales spikes in the first few months after launch. Unexpected because I haven't been doing any advertising, but I did write that first postmortem which apparently got some traction, and Cogmind has also occasionally been picked up by news and review sites.

cogmind_revenue_year_1Cogmind Year 1 gross revenue, annotated.


Each new alpha release naturally tends to give a slight boost to sales simply because news gets posted around, so there's the obvious incentive to get new releases out there, but at the same time I want each one to be truly significant, so it's a balancing act to work on a major version as long as possible before it really needs to be released.

Still, the ongoing sales numbers are so small compared to the initial release (lots of people were waiting for that...) that the alpha release effect isn't so apparent above. Looking at a monthly revenue chart will explain a little more about the long-term cycle

cogmind_revenue_year_1_by_month

Cogmind Year 1 gross revenue by month.


The first 3-4 months were all about the initial wave of attention based largely on pent up interest, so they don't really count. Then revenue started settling into a long, slow trend downward. I believe in the bigger picture November was a pre-holiday slump, since I don't have any Cogmind-specific details to explain why that was the lowest month. I can say that sales and releases of other games don't seem to have any real impact on Cogmind sales, likely because Cogmind's numbers are so small to begin with (really, a couple sales per day makes that day for me :D), plus it's a unique game.

February I can explain, though. That was a release leap month, when I was working on a big alpha update laying the foundation for the development of a whole new and very different part of the world, so it took extra long and there were the usual news updates but no releases during that period. The effect was also likely amplified by a post-holiday slump, especially after a fairly successful December and January.

Ever since February I've started expecting that revenue could truly flatline at any time, but that has yet to play out (whew!). This May is turning out to be another February-like month, though, so it's increasingly important that I start looking forward. More on that later.

For fun, here's the revenue by country for the corresponding period.

cogmind_revenue_year_1_by_country

Cogmind Year 1 gross revenue by country.


Nothing surprising there, given that Cogmind is only available in English. There are dozens more countries on the list below that, among them my own--Taiwan, where currently there are only two supporters (no, I don't know them!).

So in short, Cogmind has grossed US$ 62k in its first year. That sounds like a lot, but "first year" means first year on sale--development has been ongoing as my primary job for nearly three years now, averaging out to a little over $20k per year, or barely enough to get by. (Right now assuming minimum wage I'm still short $10k.)

Am I happy about it? Hell yeah! While I wouldn't call commercial traditional roguelike development sustainable just yet, I'm confident that I'll actually start turning a profit (to fund the next game!) with increased exposure and the inevitable 1.0. And for now at least it's been enough to continue on without too much worry, instead of rushing to 1.0, which means a better/more game for you :D

Investment

Thanks to everyone for your support so far! If I wasn't on this full time we wouldn't have seen anywhere near the current progress. Here is a composite changelog from the past year, Alphas 1 through 8, and this is where the time has been invested:

cogmind_time_input_by_category_through_april_2016Cogmind development time, July 2013 - April 2016 (excludes 2012 7DRL work).


The total time investment comes to 5,218 hours.

Cogmind is a code-heavy game, since the vast majority of visual assets are scripted rather than drawn manually--that same graph for other games would look quite different. Not surprisingly two-fifths of development is spent writing code.

As is common with most (successful) indie games, community efforts play a large role in that success. At least a third of my time is spent writing blog posts, posting development updates, and (more recently this past year) on the forums interacting with players.

Sure it would be nice if more of that effort could instead be funneled directly into the game itself, but honestly a portion of that community interaction helps get the word out about the game (thereby enabling everything else because that's where revenue comes from :P) while also having a number of indirect benefits for the game itself. Interacting with others, or even just writing for a reflective audience of me, has helped shape the game over the years. This approach is the foundation of well-rounded healthy development, something enjoyed by few AAA studios, where everything takes a back seat to marketing and revenue concerns. (The #1 goal there is to maximize profit, after all. If my goal with Cogmind was to maximize profit at minimal risk rather than make a dream game, it would be on Steam and at "1.0" already.)

In the graph you can also see the Content category is starting to rear its head there, an increasingly important part of late-alpha development as most of the mechanics and systems are in place, but the world has plenty more locations to fill in.

The Future

Where do we go from here? Well, as usual there's the development roadmap outlined over on the FAQ which is updated with every release.

cogmind_roadmap_160427

Cogmind roadmap as of April 27, 2016.


As indicated it's really just a general outline, and there are quite a few other features (and even new locations) I want to edge in there if I can afford to.

In the near term, another release will be out within the next few weeks, then there will be a slight lull for part of the summer as I take a trip to visit family (it's been years) and hopefully recover from my recent injuries without issue. Then it's back home to work on late-game stuff and releases will continue throughout the rest of the year.

The biggest elephant in the dungeon is obviously Steam--Cogmind needs to be there eventually, most importantly as a way to reach new players. It's unfortunately not anywhere near as simple as I'd like it to be (my current arrangement is super simple by comparison). Due to my situation, I have no choice but to remotely set up a company in the U.S. (as a foreigner) to sell Cogmind via Steam. Yeah, not fun. (WTF I JUST WANNA MAKE GAMES /minirant.) That's only one factor among many, though.

Increasing exposure and expanding the player base requires a huge investment of time that would further drag on development, but it might become necessary before long depending on how many new players the next couple months bring. Tough to balance!

Cogmind is far enough along (and close enough to completion) that it's about time to see what if any effect a slightly lower price will have on take up. So to celebrate the one-year anniversary of Cogmind Alpha Access, starting this week I'll be offering a new limited-quantity tier at $25. Although one could say it's 17% off the $30 price, it's not technically a "sale" because the new tier doesn't come with any perks, so it has somewhat lower intrinsic value as well. I'm extremely curious what kind of impact this will have on sales. As usual, I'll be sharing the results at some point.

But for now, because they took forever to create and I want my money's worth, here are a few of the updated website images to come :D

cogmind_terrain_scannerActivating a terrain scanner.


cogmind_transmission_jammerActivating a transmission jammer.


cogmind_composite_map_factory

Dev shot of a fully-revealed factory map generated using the latest algorithm

(lots of important changes from a year ago).


Post comment Comments
BrightBit
BrightBit - - 33 comments

Very impressive and very helpful statistics! Did you do everything on your own (art, business, web, etc.)? How much time did it take you to write this article?

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Kyzrati Author
Kyzrati - - 210 comments

Thanks! Yeah, I do almost everything myself, except the outsourced pixel art tileset, which *isn't* included in the stats (I worked with Kacper Woźniak on that, he's great: Thkaspar.tumblr.com) I'll do an even more detailed breakdown and analysis of the time in the future--this was just a snapshot of what it looked like at the one-year mark for reference.

It took 6 hours to write the article. I'm a pretty slow writer :P. Each of my articles takes about 5-10 hours.

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BrightBit
BrightBit - - 33 comments

Thank you in heaps for your honest answer! It's really valuable to see how much time other devs need for certain tasks. I'm really bad at e.g. estimating the development time for certain features. Do you have any strategies? How did you estimate the development times for your roadmap?

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Kyzrati Author
Kyzrati - - 210 comments

Sure, good estimations can only come with experience, and of course familiarity with the project at hand helps supplement that once it's further along.

If over time (years of developing) you pay close attention to how long certain tasks take you,
then as long as you have a clear goal for a given feature, it shouldn't be too difficult to use prior experience to make an educated guess.

Of course certain types of features might require more flexibility and be padded with extra time (more complicated and therefore more prone to unexpected bugs? or perhaps it's not possible to entirely think through a given feature until part of it is finished?).

Also, my estimates won't always be completely accurate, and when that happens I'll analyze why that is and it helps make future predictions that much better. It's a long process :)

It's worth putting in the effort to record how long things take, and analyzing it once in a while.

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BrightBit
BrightBit - - 33 comments

Thanks again! I can't emphasize enough how helpful your answers are.

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Kyzrati Author
Kyzrati - - 210 comments

Doing my part to help other indie devs :)

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