I come bearing gifts! Some of you may remember the Witanlore: Dreamtime Giveaway we ran back at the end of January. Well I’m back at it again with keys for the game Butcher, by Transhuman Design!
THD is a great group of developers and have been kind enough to grant us 10 keys to hand out. As the developers themselves describe the game:
You can check out Butcher on the official website.
We've also just put up a Nexus Site for Butcher.
(Our very own SirSalami has kicked things off over there with a punishing level called Exile!)
To enter for a chance to win you must do the following:
1. Follow Transhuman Design on Twitter
2. Follow Nexus Mods on Twitter
3. Retweet any of our Butcher Giveaway tweets with the hashtags #NXMGiveaway and #Butcher2D
(You must do all of these to be entered for a chance to win!)
1. Go to our pinned Butcher Giveaway FB Post
2. Like that post and leave a comment as to why you should win.
3. Share the post using the hashtags #NXMGiveawayand #Butcher2D
(You must do all of these to be entered for a chance to win!)
The giveaway starts today and runs through Sunday night (11:59PM on March 12th).
On Monday we will pick 5 winners from Facebook and 5 winners from Twitter.
You do NOT have to enter on both Facebook and Twitter for a chance to win.
Only doing one or the other is fine, as long as you meet all the listed requirements for the social media platform of your choice.
Good luck to everyone and happy modding!
23 comments
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A moderator has closed this comment topic for the time beingEven if I don't win a key I am going to buy the game. Definitely has piqued my interest since I'm one of those who played Commander Keen on first day of release.
That is quite the scumbag way to do things. And yet everyone is supportive of it.
Why not make the requirements lesser, but nudge people to help raise publicity by retweeting or reposting stuff if they desire? A more fair way to do things, and being open to people not having social media accounts, as @indycurt mentioned.
I can't help but feel theres something in the background at work here. Nexus has no business (far as I'm concerned) being someones PR department. Why this game of all the games? Did they contact you? Sponsor this? And just 10 keys for your million of potential entrees?
If you'd like to understand more about what I do, my intentions with social media, and (most importantly) the benefits it can bring to this community, please read this.
Best to hear the side of the person you portraying as a "scumbag" before throwing such accusations around, no?
Not everything has some deep conspiracy behind it or a seedy ulterior motive. There was no hidden reason as to why it was this game. They have some modding support. I contact devs with games that have modding support about collaborating on promotional events. It helps us and it helps them. It helps us in that both of our communities grow. At the same time, our members get free stuff. It's a win-win-win from what I can see. Beyond that, it is absolutely in our best interest (as far as I'm concerned) to continue growing this community and fostering deeper engagement with said community.
We are looking at events (contests and the like) that are run within the community instead of on social media, but I don't want to talk about anything before it's prepared. There is a bigger picture here, but I don't think it is as sinister as the conclusions you've leapt to. The bigger picture is better engagement with our community and fun events. The bigger picture is the continued growth of this community and relationships with more game developers. Some events will be on the site. Some events will be through social media. That's it.
"That value comes in the form of leverage. Having a massive social media following can be used as a bargaining chip when talking with game developers and other companies about doing cross-promotion events, or when talking to a developer about why Nexus Mods would be a good choice for their modding community."
"When I approach a game developer about a cross-promotion event, in which we use social media to give away game keys, and they see a site with 12 million members and a massive social media following, they are far more likely to want to participate than they would be if they just saw a site with 12 million members and no social media presence." - From the page you've linked.
This is inherently my problem. The reason you are given keys is by "bargaining" your members out. The intentions might be good, aiding up-and-coming developers with their content, but the execution I think is wrong.
This method of "giveaway" same as giving content for "donations", when in essentially you are gating off content/prizes for a paid/reposting user base. (Ref. Cry of Fear, donations for Famas and "donators room"). You could say that those who want to be part of the "giveaway" should also lend their social voice in support, but then there are people like me who prefers to keep their business private. Again I raise the issue that @indycurt presented, those who doesn't use social media or are maybe even unable to.
This "bargaining chip" should rather be used as pressure against oppression (like paid mods and the likes) than used for publicity to games. A unified voice for a better experience.
I repeat my point, why not let the whole nexus userbase participate in the giveaway by default, thereby maybe garnering more members, and nudge those interested into reposting and giving out publicity to the game, thereby leveling the playing field and letting those good of heart and interest help the project. Or even better to limit your giveaway crowd to those interested, have them post to you specifically @Nexus or something where they can say something that they are interested, eliminating random people even unaware receiving something they might not bother with. Then you are not pushing people to broadcast this to everyone just because you said so, as might be intended.
It might seem as I'm trying to "enter the contenst by doing nothing", but to be clear I am just pointing out my view of this whole thing. Using the second example I would probably not have bothered with the ordeal. A giveaway is a giveaway, free to enter without something in return and have a chance to be given something for nothing. This is more a trade, a social media repost for a ticket to your "lottery".
A (better?) example would be the recent giveaway on ModDB, where you posted your mod suggestion in order to have a chance at some games. You found your mod and posted it to them (using @Modlove or something) and they took those in. The site got publicity through the giveaway, the mods got the publicity through people voicing those mods and the community might win something. I didn't enter to be given something, but because I wanted to share a mod I liked (Improved Atmosphere for Dragon Age: Origins was my pick). In contrast, you are forcing us to both "follow" you and a developer, as well as broadcast something. "You *MUST* do this".
I am not against Nexus doing these types of things, just personally disagree with your handling of it. It might not be a "deep conspiracy / seedy ulterior motives" but you got to admit you are handling real power here and using it. Nexus support of a game could save a failed project or ruin a guaranteed success. (E.G. paid modding could have worked with full Nexus support, what could community really have done with a Steam/Nexus collaboration?)
And as you've said: "The bigger picture is the continued growth of this community and relationships with more game developers." We've come to see that more and bigger developers/publishers care less about the end user and more about their monetary gain. A "good" relationship with a developer/publisher is one that gives them more, and I don't think that should be the focus of Nexus. A good relationship with developers/publishers should be better integration between your service and theirs, effectively helping modding and mod hosting/managing becoming even better for the end user. The end result shouldn't be gains, but delivering a better product.
I am not judging the game itself by any means, by the description I don't think I would be interested and it sounds like a niche game for those who prefer "cult classics", which isn't my identification.
I hope I don't give out any wrong impressions of my support for your intentions, about helping and nurturing modding in games, mod development and aspiring developers. Other sites might do the same type of content, but the reason I post my opinions/critique here is because I do want Nexus to be better than other sites. To aspire to something greater and be a better example. And also be free and fair.
That means pump facebook, twitter, etc...
Retweet, retweet, retweet...it's all shady social media nonsense, that they buy into.
It'll probably work. Shame though.
The mind boggles.
Not going to jump through the hoops for "a chance" to win.
But, that is my choice. Thanks for the promo offer, THD.
follow
retweet.
ah. haha, yeah. ok.
Wait? What? The whole reason giveaways are done is in the hopes of more views/sales to increase revenue (or, in the case of non-profits, contributions.) That's the ONLY reason they're done. (What planet do you live on?)