I'm not against pledging real-world money to a crowdfunding campaign, even if that pledge is essentially a pre-order for a game that doesn't have a release date. Such is the case when you pledge on one of the many crowdfunding websites, which I have done for several games over the years, thankfully with a relatively high success rate of the game being released on time. But the gamble of crowdfunding a video game isn't the reason we're here today, instead, we're here to talk about actually sitting down and playing those games once they're released.
Going back to 2018, I've sponsored/helped fund six games that I thought looked like they'd be fun to play. But then, why haven't I played them, or at the very least, why did I only start them up and not continue. I don't think it was a lack of being fun because I did enjoy what I played of 9 Years of Shadows and Lords of Exile, but I've never started Sherlock Holmes: The Awakened. So for the remainder of our time here, I'm going to go into List Mode with a little bit of commentary. I'll order games chronologically by the date that the crowdfunding ended along with when I finally received the game and the system I picked it up on, because additional context is always helpful.
Now, I have played Hatch Tales a bit, more so than any of the other games listed below, but that is primarily because The Squire really likes to play it and wants there to be more playable levels on my Switch profile, so every once in a while, I'll boot it up and try to 100% a level or two. It is a fun game that plays a lot like Chicken Wiggle so I'll give it that, and there'll likely be a Game EXP article later in the year.
I haven't yet played this, likely because I keep going back and forth about wether or not I should play the original 2008 game first, or just jump right into this one. And if I didn't already have a copy of it through GOG, I would probably go and buy it right now (as it's on sale for $0.99). Maybe I will play that one after all.
I did play the game for a bit after it was released, maybe less than an hour and I enjoyed what I played, but I think I got distracted by some other games at the time, likely still playing Tears of the Kingdom. Yeah, we'll blame The Legend of Zelda on that one.
I played the first stage in the game to get a feel for it and was a little surprised that it wasn't quite what I was expecting. Not just a Castlevania homage, there were mechanics I wasn't expecting that I will get to when we cover it in an upcoming Game EXP article later this year.
Being the most recent game I've received, I haven't yet played it. I know I should, just like every game on this list and it was Chrono Sword that actually inspired me to make this list and in turn, this article. I began wondering how many games I had pledged money towards and why I hadn't played m/any of them.
My reason for not playing Meifumado yet doesn't have anything to do with any of their troubles or being angry that this video game developer happened to be from a country that was supporting another country's hostile invasion of Ukraine. I understand that the game released is not exactly what was promised or by some reviews on Steam simply call an unfinished game. I just haven't gotten around to it. And like I've said a lot about other games, you can look forward to a Game EXP later this year.
And that was kind of the whole point of this article, well one of two points. The first was to put down in a list the games that I've pledged money to, and to say that this is the year that I play all of these games, and gods willing, will write about all of them too. I haven't looked any of the games up on HowLongToBeat, but I don't imagine that they're any 50+ hour epics in there, maybe closer to 20+, depending on my skill and surviving an onslaught of enemies, especially in the last four games.
But that's my declaration this Friday, January 17th, 2025: I will play all of the games listed here and likely write about them, either in their own Game EXP article or en masse.