Here are the verbatim quotes from the Kickstarter pitch text:
Here are the verbatim quotes from the Kickstarter pitch text:
The word they used wasn't "demo", it was "prototype".
Plus the fact that the Kickstarter project was specifically to create a playable prototype that would then be used to attract further investment towards the full game.
The point that keeps getting missed, no matter how often it's reinforced, is that the Kickstarter project was explicitly to fund a playable prototype game that would then be used to attract backing for the full game. That's explained both in the pitch text on the Kickstarter site and in the original pitch video.
The CLANG Kickstarter description clearly states that:
I have almost zero interest in shooters as a gaming genre but a very strong interest in good game storytelling (re. The Last of Us). The First World War was thoroughly documented via newspaper reports, journals, diaries and even film; there's easily enough detail at both the macro and micro levels to lay the…
Mine too. Loved "Crazy Eyes" Suzanne going Shakespeare on that girl's ass, followed by Poussey confusedly juggling her hardened con role-play with impressed political correctness.
I just watched the full documentary. They tour around desperately poor Ukranian mining towns offering carefully stage-managed moments of catharsis to victims of poverty, sexual abuse and addiction.
Makes good sense - thanks.
How about racial/gender minorities as villains in "post-politically correct" fiction?
Copperfield is probably the world's most prolific collector of antique DeMoulin Brothers apparatus.
This takes me back to a sunset from my childhood in Wellington, New Zealand. Absolutely amazing sight - the whole sky was full of iridescent clouds.
It strikes me that Jayar La Fontaine's experience with vaping is so atypical as to be basically irrelevant ...
Most of them are birth defects (conjoined twins, etc.)
I learned to stilt-walk about 15 years ago and have never quite "bought" the idea of people navigating swampy, uneven ground on stilts. The small, hard surface area of the bottom of a stilt concentrates the walker's weight - it's sort of an anti-snow-shoe effect - in a way that almost guarantees sinking inextricably…
It's from a behind-the-scenes-of-Labyrinth TV documentary that was released about the same time as the movie - I used to have a copy on VHS.
Michael Moschen is kind of a modern juggling legend. He also has an astounding act that involves bouncing multiple rubber balls around inside a triangular structure.
I don't think I've ever heard so many cliches jammed together in a single trailer. Of course, that might be the point ...
The poor guy in #3 also appears to have a baby growing out of his left elbow. Conjoined twins, obviously.
Given that the stories themselves are set during the Minutemen era of the 1940s, it's very likely that the graphic style is intended to evoke '40s comic book art.