This is of course not including the yearly Unity subscription, where Unity Pro costs $2,040 per seat (although they may have Enterprise pricing)

Absolutely ridiculous. Many Unity devs are saying they’re switching engines on social media.

  • @4am@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    The enshittification continues.

    Watch for more products that enable normal people to do great things to become paywalled. Only your gatekeeper masters may direct the market, and the creativity. In their infinite wisdom, they demand the control of gods.

    Billionaires are a mistake.

    EDIT: and I love the bait-and-switch of charging anyone who ever used Unity, even under different terms. Electric chair for the CEO.

    • Bonehead
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      I’m starting to see enshittification as part of the cycle of renewal in capitalism. Don’t get me wrong…it’s a completely foolish and disasterous way of doing things, and billionaires are a black mark on society as a whole, but innovation happens when you take away the established tools.

      Twitter is a good example. Elon seriously accelerated the enshittification, and now it’s tanking. Meanwhile, alternatives are springing up at breakneck speeds to replace it. Which one will win the war is anyone’s guess, but Twitter will be the loser regardless. Reddit is another one. And Digg before it. As one commits corporate seppuku, others step in to take its place.

      While it sucks for anyone caught in the crossfire, and the ones responsible for nuking a corporate landscape often skip away with a golden parachute, it usually leads to a shakeup that can bring amazing innovations. The key is to get in on the next wave, hope you picked the winner, and make sure you get out before shit hits the fans this time.

      • @Terces@lemmy.world
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        7710 months ago

        But that cycle is bad for the advancement of society as a whole. Instead of having something others can build on, everyone has to start from scratch and redo a lot of the work that was already done.

        Establishing new social networks for example take a whole lot of time. And then you tank them so others can do the same thing all over again? That’s not progress. That’s standstill being sold as progress.

        • @WarmSoda@lemm.ee
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          2510 months ago

          Lol your mistake is thinking that these people care at all about “the advancement of society as a whole”.

        • Bonehead
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          1310 months ago

          I’m not saying it’s a good thing. In fact, I opened with the statement that it’s not a good thing. But it just seems to be the way things are done, intentional or not. It’s a constant 2 steps forward, 1 and a half steps back, but slowly we do make some progress. This is just an observation that I’ve noticed. I truly wish it were different, but that’s just how things seem to unfold.

        • @Lucky@programming.dev
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          910 months ago

          Specifically on Twitter and Reddit, this has led to a massive jump in federated social media. That seems like an advancement to me.

        • @Godort@lemm.ee
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          310 months ago

          That point about social networks is true, but it’s more of a symptom of the internet at large.

          Running things on the web isn’t free and most of the major innovation has stemmed from trying to hide that fact from people.

          It started in the late 80s with donations to the guy that ran your favorite BBS. But that was not sustainable, so banner ads started showing up, but they didn’t pay out enough. Then the pop-up and was born, but it turns out that people really hate those. So then they did away with them entirely, instead harvesting data about the users to sell to advertisers.

          Now, there are basically 2 paths forward. Host your own microservices that connects to a larger network, widely spreading out hosting and storage costs across the userbase. Or, pay a subscription to access a service with the understanding that they won’t advertise or sell your data.

          • rastilin
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            1210 months ago

            Donations are somewhat sustainable because the per-user cost of having stuff on the internet is super low. So even at $1 USD per month any remotely successful service becomes wildly profitable. People just thought that banner ads would be yet-even-more profitable since they can be applied to everyone who looks at the site, not just regular users.

            • ℛ𝒶𝓋ℯ𝓃
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              But in that case, it would be best to do a subscription model of like $10-ish per year.

              This would involve an agreement not to sell data, to collect only data with a use demonstrated to be critical to the operation of the service, and a plan to dispose of that data within X amount of time. This also needs a written contract stating that the cost of subscription won’t go more than X% above the user’s pro-rata share of the demonstrated cost of providing the service, consisting of certain very specific purposes (building, servers, ISP, employee revenue, etc.) to avoid cheating for more profit. A subscription service, protected against privacy infringement and price gouging (a profit limit).

              If it’s ever going to work this would need to be a government-mandated privacy act. I usually hate government intervention, but this is very much a necessary evil to prevent price gouging.

              I only suggest this over donations, because realistically, after upscaling to a global audience, only 5-10% of traffic would be users that choose to donate, increasing costs to around $10-20/month, which yet again lowers the number of people who choose to donate. It stabilizes, but at such a low percentage that it’s unsustainable at a large scale without millionaire donors, and a very small percent willing to pledge $20-30 ish per month throughout the entire product lifetime…

      • @mrmacduggan@lemmy.ml
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        110 months ago

        Yeah, at least these dominant corporations are now being forced to compete and become profitable without the advantages of free financing. This process is revealing the ghoulishness that their exaggerated ability to outspend their competition via borrowed capital had been hiding from the consumers.

  • db0
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    13310 months ago

    Surprised nobody mentioned here, but Godot Engine people. It’s FOSS and will never charge you for anything. Don’t stay in an abusive relationship

  • @WarmSoda@lemm.ee
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    12010 months ago

    They’re going to back off on this and replace it with something bad but not as horrible. This is testing the water, and opens the door to charging everyone money every time you install a game, not just devs.

    Have an install saved on your external and want to install it next week? You’ll get charged for it as of you didn’t already pay for it.

    Games you have in your steam/gog backlog? Get charged again for it when you decide to play it.

    I guarantee there are investors/publishers/whoever hitting themselves right now screaming “why didn’t I think of that?”.

    • DontMakeMoreBabies
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      10 months ago

      I’d pirate the fuck out of everything if that happens.

      The second Steam charges me for an install… Back to the high seas.

      Not even about the money.

      • @Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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        8310 months ago

        That’s part of the problem; they aren’t charging you for the install, they are remotely tracking that you’ve done so and then billing the dev for it.

        If you grab a cracked version, did the person cracking that game also remove the install telemetry, or did they just make it functional? Can you be sure?

        In many cases, the dev would still be billed for you installing the game you didn’t even pay for. Unity has no incentive to ensure each install is legitimate, as they profit from failing to catch that.

        • DontMakeMoreBabies
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          3110 months ago

          Sounds like pirating a copy and then trying some network fuckery… Fun!

          But also if they make it bad enough I’ll just do something else. I love games but if they wanna fuck that up bad enough then there are always other ways to kill time.

          • @WarmSoda@lemm.ee
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            1910 months ago

            Maybe the gaming industry needs another collapse.
            AAA needs a shake up, that’s for sure, if it’s just going to continue on it’s current trajectory of “nothing new but costs more”.

            Most of the AAA’s can’t even be bothered to include as much content and as many systems as games from decades ago. You can play PlayStation 1 & 2 games that are just as complex or more complex than games releases recently. It’s all the same stuff but with more pixels and larger localization folders.

            Why is Skyfield 130 GBs when at it’s core it has all the same functions as Oblivion or Fallout? Why does Octopath Traveller have a sliver of the in-game content that games like Star Ocean and Final Fantasy 9 had? Sports games and Shooters were lost causes years ago.

            Indie devs have been making games that are far more fun and original than most AAA teams of multiple hundreds have been able to do in awhile.

            The big guys need to return to focusing on fun. Some AAA’s can still do it. BG3 and Zelda are the current obvious examples. Those games are Fun. That’s what games are supposed to be.

            Also, battle passes and season passes and everything that horse armor spawned can all go in the trash when there is another video game collapse.

            • @NuPNuA@lemm.ee
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              410 months ago

              Comparing Octopath Traveller to FF9 isn’t really fair. One was an entry on Squares premiere series with tons of money behind it, the other is a side project made by a side team with far less resources. Starfield is a big install as it’s using far higher quality textures than previous Bethesda games, probably higher quality audio too.

          • @RonSijm@programming.dev
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            510 months ago

            This is already how it works with poorly cracked games/software. The games’ crack.nfo (readme) will say something like: - Copy the .exe to the /bin/ folder, add the .exe to your windows firewall or otherwise prevent it from accessing the internet.

            • @ChiefSinner@lemm.ee
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              210 months ago

              Which is why I like tinywall or simplewall – it uses the windows firewall to block all apps by default.

        • @agent_flounder@lemmy.one
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          1010 months ago

          Hm. I guess if one can reverse the code and sniff the network then one can probably figure out all but the most sophisticated phone home evasion. Just like with cracking games, eventually someone figures it all out. Game crackers will have to add network monitoring to their toolkit if they haven’t yet I guess.

          I guess the only way to be sure is to not buy those games.

          • @Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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            My only issue there is you, as an end user installing these cracks, don’t really have a way to be sure it was removed (unless you yourself know the details of and block the phone home). It’ll have no effect on you either way, but it’ll certainly effect the dev if you miss it; it’s only gotta get through once (per install), maybe it tries until it succeeds.

            I very much agree with various developers decisions to change engines. I feel for the ones that don’t really have that option.

            • Ech
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              210 months ago

              wouldn’t a simple firewall block solve that?

              • @Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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                310 months ago

                Possibly, but can you expect an entire userbase, potentially millions of people, to:

                A) know about the problem

                B) care enough to do something

                And C) know how+be able to apply that block

                Especially when there’s no effect for end users whether it does or doesn’t go through.

                A significant portion of players won’t bother. Enough that the ones that do don’t really matter.

                • Ech
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                  110 months ago

                  To be clear, I’m specifically taking about pirated versions, which I figure the people using have enough interest in doing to know how or figure out how to do something like that, or even have it disabled at the start by the game crackers.

        • @ChiefSinner@lemm.ee
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          210 months ago

          Launch the game offline. Which if you’ve ever done with a game made in the last 5 or so years and launching legitamitly, it is increasingly harder to do so.

          I take my gaming laptop into work. I can launch older games without an internet connection, but stuff like red dead redemption 2 doesn’t like to start offline – presumably due to telemetry.

          • @Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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            10 months ago

            Copy-Paste from a reply about blocking the telemetry:

            Possibly, but can you expect an entire userbase, potentially millions of people, to:

            A) know about the problem

            B) care enough to do something

            And C) know how+be able to apply that block

            Especially when there’s no effect for end users whether it does or doesn’t go through.

            A significant portion of players won’t bother. Enough that the ones that do don’t really matter.

    • AnonTwo
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      2610 months ago

      I think they might actually get told to fuck off by publishers, strictly because they wouldn’t be making any money out of it on top of the bad publicity being passed down to them by consumers.

      • @GreenMario@lemm.ee
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        2810 months ago

        Every major publisher including Trillion dollar Microsoft has Unity engine games in their catalog.

        I don’t think any of them really want to pay for that. MS would just scoop up Unity before paying that.

      • @WarmSoda@lemm.ee
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        I’m talking about the publishers doing it down the road.

        I guarantee there are investors/publishers/whoever hitting themselves right now screaming “why didn’t I think of that?”.

        • ℛ𝒶𝓋ℯ𝓃
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          110 months ago

          Until the owner of the engine is the publisher, like if Microsoft buys Unity and only sells on MS Store…

    • Kbin_space_program
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      1110 months ago

      EA has been doing this for years. Except they were nearly infinitesimally nicer about it and gave you X installs per key, with the caveat that you had to burn hours on their support line to get it reset.

      • @GreenMario@lemm.ee
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        1710 months ago

        Probably where that guy got the idea since the Unity CEO was the EA CEO during that online pass era.

  • @douglasg14b@programming.dev
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    Nevermind PC games, think about how this would impact mobile games. Where you get TONS of transient installs, and very few consistent players.

    You could actually go into debt by using unity, and accidentally being successful if you aren’t abusively monitizing your game.

    • @AdmiralShat@programming.dev
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      That’s what this is about. The CEO said that devs who don’t put ads in their games and monetize are “fucking idiots”

      Unity isn’t a game engine company anymore, they’re an advertisement company that owns the rights to a game engine.

    • @Squids@sopuli.xyz
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      210 months ago

      Or gacha/live service games, where you’ll get enough installs and overall revenue to push you over the 200k threshold, but never enough installs for the 1 mil discount, in a genre where it’s not uncommon for one person to have the same game on multiple devices (especially if you have a PC or console port), and for games to have a cycle of low revenue dead months that doesn’t always coincide with new player counts due to the whale rule.

    • @Lianodel@ttrpg.network
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      5310 months ago

      Their Twitter is even leaning into the “answering questions” angle. Just frame the backlash as a result of ignorance, rather than people being reasonably upset by a situation they understand perfectly well. Then they dodge inconvenient questions about things like malicious automated downloads. Of course, they’re happy to “listen to feedback.” Not act on it, of course, but the social media person is happy to scroll past whatever you have to say!

    • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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      510 months ago

      Remember that all these dudes spend most of their week reading each other’s linked in posts and jerking each other off.

      These things are happening now because it is in vogue among their peers

  • @BetaDoggo_@lemmy.world
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    9610 months ago

    Smells like a lawsuit to me. Retroactively devaluing software that they were already paid for.

    It’s probably a scream test that they’ll walk back with something more reasonable in the next few days.

    • SharkEatingBreakfast
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      10 months ago

      This happened to a crafting/cutting machine and its software a while back.

      The company wanted to start charging once you hit a miniscule upload threshold, forcing you to pay if you wanted to upload more than, say, 20 images per day.

      Folks who already owned the machine were furious that they’d essentially be limited out of their own machine, when there was previously no extra charges for use.

      The company rolled back their statement and stated that they’d only start charging people who purchased & registered their machines after a certain date. Older users would not be charged.

      Even so, after the shit they pulled, people no longer recommend that specific machine/brand/company anymore because of their nonsense.

        • SharkEatingBreakfast
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          1310 months ago

          Cricut.

          Also you can’t even use the machine offline! They force you to use their absolutely terrible software and I have to “calibrate” it myself to make things turn out how it’s supposed to! (eg. centered cuts, alignment, etc.)

          If I would have known it was this bad, I wouldn’t have gotten one in the first place. I make it work but goddamn, so much of it is absolute garbage!

          • @ALostInquirer@lemm.ee
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            310 months ago

            Any chance you’ve found alternatives to the machine, or its software? I still see these mentioned here & there in crafting discussions as good tools, but I wouldn’t want to be dependent on their software even if the machines are good tbh.

            • SharkEatingBreakfast
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              310 months ago

              I can’t vouch for it myself, but I’ve heard great things about the “Silhouette” machines! Definitely check them out to see if they could meet your needs.

              • drphungky
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                39 months ago

                It’s crazy there isn’t an open source community around it. 3d printing and CNC have been democratized, it’s wild that printing and cutting vinyl hasn’t.

    • @OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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      610 months ago

      Unity dev here. The Unity seats were always a subscription model, and this new fee system doesn’t kick in until January 1st.

      So there’s no lawsuit, you don’t have to renew your subscription if you don’t want to though.

      • @BetaDoggo_@lemmy.world
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        810 months ago

        So if you don’t renew your subscription the new tax won’t effect you? From my understanding the change was retroactive and effected all previous unity games. If you don’t release a new build after the change will the tax still be applied?

          • I Cast Fist
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            810 months ago

            What about charging per download/install after the threshold? It sure sounds like it won’t matter if you’re subscribed or not, as their announcement mentioned Personal licenses would be charged USD 0,20 per download after the 200k lifetime

      • @NuPNuA@lemm.ee
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        210 months ago

        Can you still sell the games you’ve made on unity if you don’t have an active sub or will you have to delist them?

          • Echo Dot
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            That’s still pretty awful really. If I have a game that’s halfway through development as a developer I am now disincentivized to finish it. They are changing the terms halfway through development.

            January 1st isn’t exactly a lot of warning.

            This would be borderline acceptable if we’d been given 6 months warning not 1 and 1/2 months

        • @Unkend@lemmy.world
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          510 months ago

          I Deleted my Unity Account on this one and they sent me a Email

          Hello,

          Your account is marked for deletion. Please note that Unity will retain any information to the extent necessary (1) to meet financial and legal compliance,(2) if applicable, to prevent fraud or respond to valid legal process, and (3) where our systems have anonymized.

          If you make over X amount they will come after you for fee’s.

    • @June@lemm.ee
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      7110 months ago

      I turned down a job offer at a company that relied solely on twitter’s api in order to accomplish their goals. It was a sales lead generation tool that used a scripted approach to warming leads before handing them off to AE’s to bring home.

      Within a year Twitter shut down their access and the company went under. That’s the day I learned not to trust another company to allow you to make money with their product permanently.

        • @June@lemm.ee
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          1510 months ago

          AWS is different as it’s a product marketed and sold as a product.

          This company was using Twitters api in a novel way that want subject to an agreement, just Twitter’s whims to allow it to continue.

          • @foo@programming.dev
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            410 months ago

            I worked for a company that used Google application engine for all of their cloud tools and services. Then one day Google flipped a new billing process and the entire thing became more expensive than self hosting. Sure gae would let us scale to support insane levels but the product was never going to need that scale.

        • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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          210 months ago

          Any aws pipeline I build I write as agnostically as possible, and usually write basic ideas and selections from another platform into my docs and proposals.

          It’s happened twice in my career that a shop had totally jumped provider, which isn’t a lot but is enough to keep one eye open

    • @Zacryon@feddit.de
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      10 months ago

      Developing a good and feature rich game engine which also runs performant is a huge effort. That alone can cost a good team 2 years at least. Even more if we consider todays graphic standards. That’s nothing which smaller studios can easily deliver. So yeah, it’s an obvious decision to buy a license for a proprietary engine, where a lot of work has already went into. That’s just business and nothing crazy about it. Companies using services or products of other companies is pretty ordinary.

      • @257m@lemmy.ml
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        -510 months ago

        FOSS alternatives to Unity exist though. And from my personal experience it looks like Godot seems like the better engine anyways. Not to mention the fact that there is no need for a game engine to create a game. Opengl + a windowing/utility library is ideal.

      • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        410 months ago

        Did they clear it with the owners first?

        Because if you don’t, and later they pursue the legal route, there’s not much you can do, you agree to their terms or fight a lawsuit where they’ll likely take everything

        • @WldFyre@lemm.ee
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          110 months ago

          Game devs and engine devs don’t necessarily have the same skill sets though, right?

          And who complained about Sync for Reddit? How would used foss alternatives to access Reddit have changed what happened to Reddit?

      • @gencha@lemm.ee
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        -3110 months ago

        People wrote their own game engines since the earliest of games, they just want the easy route today and a marketplace to monetize on. These are poisoned gifts, and always have been.

        • Echo Dot
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          5810 months ago

          And if everyone invented their own wheel every time they wanted to build a new cart all we’d ever have is various different wheels and very few carts.

          • @Beliriel@lemmy.world
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            610 months ago

            I mean that’s honestly true. There are so many “infant” small selfmade game engines that are just complete shit lol

          • @gencha@lemm.ee
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            -910 months ago

            Great analogy, but this is a wheel you’re being charged for, after you’ve installed it on your product. Maybe you would have been better suited with your own wheel.

            You’re not picking an existing good wheel solution that you can use forever, you basically took a promise for a free wheel that you’re now being charged for, and you’re sad because the free wheel isn’t free anymore. Well, maybe you should have picked an actually free wheel to begin with.

            Unity is not the only solution to your cart problem. You’re just using it, because it is convenient.

            • @Car@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              Are you being obtuse on purpose?

              This isn’t a case of “I use unity because it is free,” because outside of recreational game developer use-cases, it isn’t free. There are very real costs associated with monetization that any developer, team, and studio should be aware of.

              Developers who have been using unity with knowledge of their pricing mechanisms are being blindsided with new pricing, that you can’t opt-out of, with a little less than 3 months notice. Going back to the wheel analogy, these teams have designed entire vehicles around these wheels, with application-specific knowledge and workarounds to be told that “Hey, regarding that product which underpins your entire project, one with which we’ve already entered into a sales agreement… we decided we want to change the agreement and track its usage and charge you more money. You have 11 weeks to get over it. Your continued use of our product implies consent to the new terms of this agreement.”

              You can’t just move to a different platform without significant amounts of rework.

              • @gencha@lemm.ee
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                19 months ago

                Developers who have been using unity with knowledge of their pricing mechanisms are being blindsided with new pricing

                I get that, and it sucks. But too many offerings on the market are nowadays accepted as normal operating procedure, when they seem like such obvious traps to me. There is no financially-driven company out there that you can rely on with your project. Go with an open-source project or write what you need yourself. I fully understand the challenge of writing a product from scratch and bringing it to market. Your dependencies can break your neck one way or the other.

                You can’t just move to a different platform without significant amounts of rework.

                I know and feel that. I am no longer in entertainment, but I also see these exact same patterns in my current line of work (IT infrastructure). People use “free” tools that they take for granted, and then they’re surprised by rug-pulls. This has been happening for so long in so many areas that it’s almost tiring.

            • Echo Dot
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              Unity isn’t free, what are you on about, you pay money for it.

              There really isn’t much point having this conversation if you’re going to operate on flights of fantasy.

        • @adriaan@sh.itjust.works
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          3510 months ago

          It’s not “the easy route”. Making a game engine is a tremendous investment these days. If you are making anything other than a game that looks like early 2000s or earlier, you need a pretty capable engine that takes years to develop. That’s on top of the time it costs to make a game, which is also typically years. Not to mention that your proprietary engine will have subpar tooling and make your game development slower.

          For anyone but industry giants it’s not feasible to make a modern engine. Unless your game is not aiming to play and feel like a modern game, you have to run with an off-the-shelf engine.

          • @dylanTheDeveloper@lemmy.world
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            110 months ago

            Plus when you break it down you’ll still need 3rd party software in order to do anything more than a console only application (OpenGL, directX, Havok, Bink etc)

          • @gencha@lemm.ee
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            -1510 months ago

            I agree with everything you’re saying, but it’s still the easy route and it’s still a poisoned gift, as can be seen by this story. People rather pick the “free” and capable tool than investing time in an open-source solution that needs more work, or developing from scratch. Maybe they just want to reach more platforms to make more money, or use the super advanced tools, but that doesn’t change that you’re picking the path of least resistance, and you might pay for it in the end.

            Chances are, if you’re expecting to compete with industry giants on the same level, you’re already investing massively into the production of assets and you’re project in general. You’re just skipping the investment in the engine and tooling. If you just want to make a small game, then maybe you don’t even need Unity and would be better off with something more tailored to your project.

            I just can’t feel sorry for people who walked into this trap. I feel like this pattern has been occurring way too frequently to ignore the danger of “free” tools that really aren’t.

          • @pinkdrunkenelephants@sopuli.xyz
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            Well, it doesn’t matter if it’s hard, the companies that did it are using it to control you and so now you don’t have a choice.

            So get cracking or don’t complain.

            Also Godot is a thing.

            • @adriaan@sh.itjust.works
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              1510 months ago

              You’re not listening. It’s not that it’s hard (although it definitely is), it’s literally just infeasible financially and time wise. You cannot spend millions developing an engine unless you are a large AAA studio. You can’t pull up your bootstraps your way into making a modern game engine within the budget you have to make a game.

              As for Godot:

              1. While games like Domekeeper and Luck Be a Landlord are great, they are made by two people and one person respectively. It has not proven itself as an engine capable of supporting the type of development cycle and team necessary for larger projects.
              2. The best games released in Godot are visually vastly inferior to anything you can whip up in other commercial engines. Its focus has been on 2D, and the 3D games released in it don’t look great. Users expect more from bigger budget games.
              3. Godot is very new. Many games started development in its infancy, and some before it was even released as open source. Not to mention that most studios have existed much longer and are already established in an older engine, with lots of capital and knowledge locked up in those softwares. There is a lot of inertia to adapting new technology.
              • Captain Aggravated
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                310 months ago

                I think you’re comparing apples to orchards here.

                I’ll grant you, Unity has been a commercial standard that many large and good games have been made in, Godot hasn’t. Godot has been used largely by solo creators or small teams which has limited the scope and detail of the artwork in Godot games thus far.

                This begs the question: What’s the best looking solo-developed Unity game?

                Does that game include a lot of purchased/sourced assets? Should that count as “solo” developed then? Given the contents of Steam’s catalog, by sheer volume of titles it seems that Unity is THE engine for creating low effort shit-tier asset flip “games” that are little more than a tutorial project file with a retail price. “Games made in Unity” is a LOT of rough to look for diamonds in.

                Once you’ve found the best looking solo-developed Unity game, ask yourself this: Could this game be remade in Godot? Is Godot technically capable of running a game like this?

                I’m also unconvinced that Godot is inherently a poor choice for larger development teams. It has built-in support for versioning systems such as Git, and its modular node-in-scene system mean that different team members could work on different components independently, then bring their work together as a whole. There’s also that whole aspect where the Godot editor is itself a Godot “game” that runs in the Godot engine, which means it’s possible for developers to create their own extensions to the editor using the same skills needed to make games.

                Beyond that, much of the work on graphics–3D art, level design, character/creature design, rigging, animation–a lot of that is going to be done in an art package like Blender rather than Godot. And yes I would suggest Blender for the same reason I’d suggest Godot, because Adobe and Autodesk are also pulling the same kinds of enshitification that Unity is.

                The real reason that Unity is the industry standard? Because it’s what they teach in school. “Learn Unity because that’s what they use in the industry.”

                • @adriaan@sh.itjust.works
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                  210 months ago

                  Sorry but if large teams could pick up Godot and make next-gen games with it just like that, they would. You can’t. You can find absolutely stunning looking projects from solo creators in Unreal Engine. Sure you have assets from the asset store. That’s the point - you don’t have to reinvent the wheel.

              • @gencha@lemm.ee
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                -210 months ago

                I said this in other comments earlier, you don’t need to rewrite Unity to build your game. Build what you need, or pick up an open source product and add what you need. I don’t understand why people bring up financial feasibility if you’re being charged now for a wrong choice in the past. This was to be expected. It’s always the same pattern. If you can’t figure out how create your game without some false promise product, then don’t build your game. It’s really as easy as that.

              • @pinkdrunkenelephants@sopuli.xyz
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                10 months ago

                It’s not that it’s hard (although it definitely is), it’s literally just infeasible financially and time wise.

                And yet somehow Godot exists.

                Somehow, they managed to build a viable 2D and 3D open source engine without a massive AAA studio so clearly your assumptions are just wrong.

                You just don’t like being told you have to take responsibility for a problem someone else caused, and to that, I don’t blame you. It’s not right that we have to go through any of this. But honestly, it’s time for us millennials to realize that putting in the elbow grease to build alternatives to what others have done to us isn’t doing that, it’s us building the infrastructure to allow us to move on from the powers that be, and if you want to break away from them, you have to. Your abusers will not liberate you for you.

                It’s time to nut up and do it now.

                • @adriaan@sh.itjust.works
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                  10 months ago

                  You have no idea what you’re talking about my guy. First off, Godot has been in development since 2007. That’s 16 years ago. Secondly, Godot started in Codenix, a consulting company that made money by licensing then-closed-source Godot. They only made it open source in 2014 - 7 years into development. This is a company that made its money through selling a game engine, not through making games. Thirdly, Godot receives funding from massive companies (e.g. they received $250k in funding from Epic Games in 2020). Fourthly, Godot is not up to par with Unreal Engine or Unity. It’s NOT a viable game engine for many games being developed.

                  Edit: also, I’m not a milennial. I’m a zoomer. No, I’m not too young to have an opinion on this, I’ve been making games for 15 years.

                • Little1Lost
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                  010 months ago

                  You sound like you dont know anything about programming (at least engine programming). Most Engines have to run in something like assembly, else they would be too slow. (They use others too but Assembly is in like all, i am a junior dev so i could be wrong)

                  Assembly is already a large hurdle.
                  I mean it is “simple” as the arch linux type of “simple”. (Nothing more than you need to run it and nothing more)

                  So the option is to learn assembly or hire someone (or multiple) who can, good luck by finding one that is capable of developing an engine that does not suck and does not cost a fortune.

                  Then you need to know what the engine should do.
                  If you “only” need 2D or even only some system to interact with the console you will be fine, maybe.
                  3D is a bit more complicated, the reason why there are so much 2D/2,5D games out supports this claim.

                  Then particle support if you want it…
                  Every feature you want has to be supported!
                  And every feature costs and maybe needs maintenance when bugs occur. Supporting an operating system is a feature too :)

                  So the engine has to be updated when a mayor OS update comes out

                  There are more points for why not to make an own engine and use one of the marked that fits ones needs even if it is closed source.

                  You where so fond of Godot so trying to help them might be a good starting point for you to life your ideals. I sincerely dont want to mock you with the sentence. If you can successfully help a larger open source project everyone is happy. If you can learn something new i am sure it can benefit you. I was only a bit mad because it felt like you are comparing engines with “weekend projects” what they are definitely not in the slightest.

        • @TechieDamien@lemmy.ml
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          1810 months ago

          Yeah, and people nowadays don’t even rewrite basic libraries! Everyone should have their version of glibc or they are just lazy!!!1!!1!

          • @gencha@lemm.ee
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            19 months ago

            C implementations are available as open-source. The glibc especially is a great example of this. This comparison is not good. I’m all for using open source

        • stevedidWHAT
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          10 months ago

          Yeah let me just make my own fucking game engine right quick because that’s definitely easier than using another one that a team made and continues to make, support, and add onto because

          “It’s easier”

          Come on dude you’re just talking out of your ass. You should read about Cynicism and why nobody fucking likes that shit

          • @gencha@lemm.ee
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            -310 months ago

            You don’t have to reproduce Unity to create your game. You just need to write what you need. And you could also chose an actual free software project instead of something where they pull the rug right out from under you. If you look at the choice today, with the rug already having been pulled, would you not consider the choice an obvious mistake in hindsight? Every other project these days loses money by trying to build a following which they will then monetize on. I’m sorry for people who walked right into this trap, but it could have been avoided by making better choices in the past. Sorry if you disagree, but I’ve been around long enough to recognize these recurring patterns with “free” software.

            • stevedidWHAT
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              110 months ago

              This isn’t how you respond to people that have a problem. Total dude bro answer

              Be better man. I’m not going to continue this conversation

        • @Hector_McG@programming.dev
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          810 months ago

          People wrote their own game engines since the earliest of games

          Lazy gets, using someone else’s programming language. They should have developed their own language and written the compiler before starting to write a games engine for the game they wanted to make.

          • @Droechai@lemm.ee
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            310 months ago

            To be honest even a home written language and compiler would be based on someone else’s hardware.

            Come to think of it, imagine if American Megatrends would start with a subscription model.

            10 USD tier: 10 free boots a month, each subsequent boot shows an ad. You can skip the ad for 25 crystals.

            Crystals are bought in packs of 10 or 35.

  • wave_walnut
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    6410 months ago

    I think the reason beginners want to use Unity is because that is what they will need as professional game developers. But if professional game developers stop using Unity, then there is no reason to use Unity, no matter how beginner-friendly pricing it is.

    • I Cast Fist
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      2310 months ago

      Pretty much every gamedev course will teach either Unity, Unreal or both, so those students end up getting fucked either way.

      • @Hadriscus@lemm.ee
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        2010 months ago

        It was the status quo in animation until a few years ago : every school would teach Maya or Max and the industry as well as aspiring professionals were kinda locked with those. Others players evened out the playing field (Houdini, Blender, etc) and today it’s not the monopolistic situation it used to be.

  • @shasta@lemm.ee
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    5110 months ago

    Everyone I know has been reaching about Unreal for the past few years anyway. I’m surprised Unity is pulling this controversial move in this situation, driving more customers to the competition. It’s like if it was 2013 and AMD suddenly started charging double for their graphics cards even though Nvidia was way better

    • @tfw_no_toiletpaper@feddit.de
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      2010 months ago

      Oh damn the whole day I was thinking it was about Unreal Engine, not unity. Was pretty sad that some of the projects I follow could be abandoned. Now I’m so glad, holy shit. Reading the articles caffeine starved at 5 am in a tram probably was the culprit for misreading

  • @Katzastrophe@feddit.de
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    4310 months ago

    I gotta ask, considering the “per install” pricing, what exactly is an installation in the eyes of Unity?

    A game download? In which case would a cancelled and restarted download result in two installations being logged?

    Is it an API call during first start-up? What would keep malicious actors from simply modding their game to repeat this call a thousand times?

    What about pirated copies? Do they count as being “installed”?

    • Veraxus
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      3710 months ago

      Unity’s official response to those questions as of a few hours ago is akin to “we have ways… trust us.”

      • @PixxlMan@lemmy.world
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        410 months ago

        Yup let’s trust Unity’s crummy ways, keeping in mind that it’s actually in their best interest to NOT detect false installs, since they get money when it doesn’t…

    • ℛ𝒶𝓋ℯ𝓃
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      810 months ago

      If I had to do something like that, I would make it every time the installer runs, every time it’s installed by a launcher like Steam, and as a fallback every time the game executable runs for the first time unless an installer or launcher hands it a key to say “you’ve been paid for already.” But I’m by no means a game dev so idk.

      • body_by_make
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        1510 months ago

        Cool, find a game dev you hate and set up a script to install their game and run it once as many times as possible. Let that run on a machine you don’t use for a while, then drink their tears

        • ℛ𝒶𝓋ℯ𝓃
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          310 months ago

          I’m not saying it’s a good idea, that’s just how I’d implement it - no matter how you do it it’s evil, unsafe and evasive.

  • flux
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    3210 months ago

    I think the real problem is how shady it seems. Like has everyone forgotten the concept of “grandfather in”? People will make new games in unity if they factor in the cost. I think people are understanding if they have the priory knowledge that unity needs to maybe start charging something. But sounds like they are asking for after these businesses already have created budgets. It sounds like it could be a bit of extortion depending on what the original agreement was. " Extortion might involve … damage to a companies financial well being."

    • Gyoza Power
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      510 months ago

      It’s already illegal, so it’s not like it needs any banning.

        • Gyoza Power
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          As far as I know, and as far as I’ve seen in other discussions, they are essentially changing the terms of service of signed contracts unilaterally, which in many places should be an instant lose if taken to court.

          Edit: forgot a word

          • Queen HawlSera
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            410 months ago

            I think Unity would be the one losing in court, especially since they changed the terms of service right before making this change, which is applied retroactively. That’s not how a contract works.

            I can’t just write “Btw the house is being given free of charge from the bank to the tenant” on my lease to get rid of my mortgage

            • Gyoza Power
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              310 months ago

              Yeah yeah, that’s exactly the point.

              With your own example, the bank can’t just come one day and say “btw, the house you bought 10 years ago? Yeah, we just decided that it’s price is now double, so you owe us for the 10 years you paid half of what you should”

  • @M500@lemmy.ml
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    2810 months ago

    What’s the tl:dr?

    The creators of the unity engine are charging people extra for games they have already created?

    • @popcar2@programming.devOP
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      9110 months ago

      Creators of the Unity engine want to charge developers per game install, the more people that install the game the more you have to pay. This includes games that already exist and never agreed to this. It also causes a lot of safety concerns, how will they confirm how many installs a game has? Are they bundling spyware with Unity games?

    • Peekystar
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      10 months ago

      From what I’ve heard, from January 2024, any for-profit game made in Unity that meet a certain profit and download threshold will have to pay a fee to Unity per install of said game, including those released before these changes are being introduced.

      • @WarmSoda@lemm.ee
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        4110 months ago

        Unity also said it will track installs with its own proprietary data. Speaking to Axios, Unity also confirmed that if a player deletes a game and re-installs it, that counts as two installs, and two separate fees.

        From the article linked in comments here. That’s unbelievable. I’m at a lose for words.

        I guess they don’t want anyone to use Unity at all

        • The Pantser
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          2310 months ago

          That’s fucked because I delete and download games from my steam library all the time. If I need just a little more space I’ll delete a few games but then probably pick them back up a little later.

          • Ech
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            710 months ago

            In this age of gaming, it’s a necessity. I don’t have endless storage space for 120+GB game files that I’m not playing to sit indefinitely. What a completely fucked plan.

        • Bizarroland
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          1110 months ago

          They’re only legal until someone challenges it. Shouldn’t take long before Microsoft has a nice little letter for them in the mail.

        • @Landrin201@lemmy.ml
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          110 months ago

          Up until now companies have been getting away with this because of “user agreements.” Nobody has had the money and interest to get them in court.

          I don’t see any possible way this survives a lawsuit, for exactly the reason you said. This is almost certainly not legal but nobody has had a reason to get precedent to say it until now.

    • donuts
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      1710 months ago

      They want to charge game devs $0.20 per install. Yes, that’s right, they want to charge devs 20 cents every time somebody installs their game.

        • donuts
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          410 months ago

          Ah fuck, ya got me. pays up

          … wait a minute… pays up again

          • @M500@lemmy.ml
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            210 months ago

            Now, everyone who has ever responded to one of my comments also has to pay me.

            Why a terrible company. I don’t even want to redeem their free games any more.

        • ℛ𝒶𝓋ℯ𝓃
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          10 months ago

          So 1000 installs per day (small numbers for a global title) = $200/day x 30 = $6000/mo, and then at like 10% after the hype wears off, $600/mo for the entire product lifetime (even installing on a new computer charges, so this cost doesn’t go away when new users stop coming)…

          Edit: this is actually similar to the numbers given in the original post, of an average settling at $40k / yr (so like 200k installs per year or only 550 per day across the entire world). Which like they said, yeah, is about half a million dollars over product lifetime.