Microsoft bought Mojang yesterday—you may have heard something about that. You may also have heard grumblings from some corners of the community that Minecraft creator Markus “Notch” Persson “sold out” by taking the money and abandoning his game—and, by extension, his millions of adoring fans—to the fickle whims of of a corporate villain. But Garry Newman, the man behind indie darlings Garry’s Mod and Rust, says he’d do exactly the same thing if he could, and you probably would too.
Newman pointed out in a blog post that went up shortly after the Mojang deal was was confirmed that everything changes for an indie developer once he starts hiring people to work for him, because you’re suddenly responsible for a lot more people than just yourself. Citing the case of Blitz Game Studios, which shut down in September 2013, laying off 175 employees, and then effectively re-launched in November under a new name, he wrote, “Those are the guys you don’t want to be.”
“I am sure more than the top guys at Mojang became very financially rich due to this deal and that’s something that should be admired—not seen as a bad thing,” he continued. “Long story short, I’d have done the same thing. The money is enough to very much take care of all the staff. The game is in relatively safe hands. Mojang’s legacy is as a huge success story instead of a one hit wonder. Everyone wins. Can you seriously say you’d have done it differently?”
No, Garry. No, I cannot.
The post Rust creator applauds Mojang sale to Microsoft, says he’d do the same thing appeared first on PC Gamer.
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