@kalmis666
The Delaware St. John games are actually quite enjoyable and not your usual BFG defined p&c games - they do have actual p&c adventures, see
here. A friend has the 1st one and I've played it I've played (IIRC, they are rather short (a few hours) and not that difficult) and I've checked out the demos of the the other two. In the third one, you play as the female character at some point., which was a nice touch.
@lowyhong
The BFG Games Manager (as it is called) is required to download, install and verify your license of a game you got from them. It's not required to play the games, though you need to change the shortcut as the default one brings up the Games Manager.
The problem is that you can't really back up BFG games, unless you track down where it stores the installation files (number depends on size of the game) while downloading and copy them some place else before the installation is completed as they get deleted. Your license info is stored in a .xml file which you would also need to back up.
I'm not sure if correctly merging the installation files results into an .exe file that will allow you to re-install the game without the Game Manager or if keeping the .xml file saves you the trouble of re-verifying your license, as I've never tried it.
I must say I got a little disappointed with the Delaware St. John Kickstarter. The page won't attract people that don't know the series and B. Wiegele sounds a bit detached in the vid. Answering questions and concerns on a forum rather than on the project page is also not good, imho.
And I agree with lowyhong, he needs to disclose the info about BFG - he actually needs to disclose a lot more information.
Has anyone else noticed that the $50 and $75 pledges are delivered almost 6 months earlier than the rest?
I'm starting to wonder, don't people study what other projects did successfully, before they start their own Kickstarter campaign? One would think that this is the first step to take by now. Especially when asking any amount of money with six digits.
@MoP
I don't think that the term "free" he used on the Adventure Gamers forum means "DRM-free", I think he just means that all the goodies described at every pledge level come with no additional cost.
I hope this does well, but BFG is putting me off.