Judith on 25/5/2011 at 19:50
Ah, forgot you got ingame manager for that. Anyway, the general reception of The Cabal wasn't that bad, of course it wasn't anything spectacular either.
Beleg Cúthalion on 25/5/2011 at 20:56
Quote Posted by Shadowhide
3 pages of discussion on forum is nothing , look at CoSaS release thread fo examle and you will feel the difference
Might be an issue of public relations and people clinging to authorities. If The Cabal was released by the forum admin, there probably would have been more response just because of that. Oh, and I always wondered whether or not long threads just indicate too hard puzzles. :p
Springheel on 26/5/2011 at 13:46
Quote:
while most of TDM missions have like 60-70 downloads
We just had someone looking up our download statistics, actually, and this year's missions are getting about 150-200 downloads per month, from just one mirror. Given that there are at least two or three other mirror sites for each mission, that's pretty encouraging. Sotha's "Transaction", specifically, has had well over 1200 downloads in the past two months alone.
jtr7 on 27/5/2011 at 00:38
It's slowly gaining, but it's gaining. :thumb:
MoroseTroll on 27/5/2011 at 05:18
Our common friend, Sherlock Holmes of the Thief community a.k.a.
clearing, has found a very nice, IMHO, Doom 3 map "(
http://www.vertexmason.com/) Serengrove" from Andrew Hill, which looks pretty like TDM-esque for me.
STiFU on 29/5/2011 at 18:12
Oh boy, I wasn't going to start a Cabal bash here, after all I initially planned on contributing, as did New Horizon if I remember correctly. I just wanted to use it as a reference to make a point. Campaigns are simply hard to pull off in a community effort. Another great example for this has just been posted in this thread: CoSaS. Need I say more?
MoroseTroll on 30/5/2011 at 07:33
I'm sure that some people have downloaded "Transaction" via built-in TDM Mission Loader, which is not counted by the DarkFate.ru statistics engine.
Beleg Cúthalion on 30/5/2011 at 08:08
We should have our real nit-picking war, counting all the downloads from all mirrors.