Patreon?
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I will consider it yep. Things to think about - would I still have control over the direction or would it be that it is dictated by the contributors then what is worked on etc - and if so would that be something I want to do.
Regarding merchandise, it would only work I guess if a 3rd party was involved who could manage the logistics of it. So where we would get a cut or something. I don't have time to be posting out t-shirts anyway. I know there are sites that do this for tshirts / mugs and so on.
Not sure if that would give us the wrong image though. Although a RetroPie case like the Kodi one might be nice (and some of the profit goes to charity I believe).
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@BuZz Why do you think you'd have control taken away from you? That would only happen if you gave people the option, for example, to donate a certain amount of money a month and guarantee some influence in the direction of the project (e.g binding polls).
As far as I'm concerned it's no different to donating via PayPal other than it is paid monthly and something you can do once and forget about it.
Yabause is a good example:
https://www.patreon.com/yabause -
@robertybob I guess I assumed that if people were backing like that they would expect goals etc or to be able to steer the development. I'm not familiar with it so need to read up a bit more.
But sounds fine if it would just work as donations.
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I really like the idea of official merchandise to support the project.
Those Kodi cases are really good (I'm happy with the quality and build of mine), and a similar one for RetroPie could be very popular.If that or other merchandise is a viable route to fund the project I'd be happy to stump up funds for MOQ from China etc..
Also have shipping options from other businesses.Although as above, there are a lot of considerations to the right funding model that should be thought out from the start.
Just got excited at the thought of a RetroPie case! :)You could even use Amazon fulfillment if you wanted to scale things up:
https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/G/02/FBA/FBA_UK_RateCard_Aug2016-2.pdf?ld=NSGoogle -
Any update on this?
FYI any GBA fans, mGBA is now on Patreon :)
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If you need help or someone who does the 3d modeling of that case I would gladly lend a hand.
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@Floob I agree merchandise something like the kodi case would be good.
One of the most common setup woes people seem to have is controller setup issues.
Maybe theres potential to work with a pi or retro retailer to do some kind of official retropie starter packBasic: rasperry pi kit with retropie preinstalled on SD and a couple of wired retro controllers - eg retrolink SNES
Premium : as above but with wireless/bluetooth controllers - eg 8bitdo -
@AmigaGamer you can't sell preinstalled retropie images or include them with a commercial product due to non commercial licences of many of the emulators
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@BuZz plus seeing as we have yet to have a cease and decist, once we directly compete with the mini nes with official hardware I don't see Nintendo looking the other way with that
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Agreed - I don't think we should ever go down that route. Emulator authors would consider it cashing in on their work too.
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@BuZz only thing I'd be comfortable with is the case which I think is a good idea but I'd rather not deal with the logistics of shipping etc.
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Regarding merchandise, it would only work I guess if a 3rd party was involved who could manage the logistics of it. So where we would get a cut or something. I don't have time to be posting out t-shirts anyway. I know there are sites that do this for tshirts / mugs and so on.
I dabbled in CafePress and RedBubble a little a few years ago. The whole process is pretty simple:
- Choose a product (eg a T-shirt).
- Upload your image (maybe the RetroPie logo) and place it on the product.
- Each product has a base price (say $15) that covers all expenses (manufacturing, distribution etc) and you choose a total price (say $25). The company takes the base price and you get the rest. You could make them expensive and get a fair bit of money from each product, but you won't sell many, or you can make them cheap, potentially sell a bunch, but not make much money off each.
These companies have many different products, like clothing (shirts, jackets, pants, hats), mugs/cups, mouse pads, keyrings and bags, among other things.
You can then point people to your company store (eg: retropie.cafepress.com or something), or you can set up a webstore on your own website using affiliate links.
Obviously you'd need to do some research to find the company that suits you, but you already have images to use (the RetroPie logo name and icon) and a ready built audience for your product so you won't have to spend much time or money on design and advertising.
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Aren't we going off on a bit of a tangent? I mean.. I started the thread to suggest an easy and hassle free way of the project getting regular donations, not selling merchandise.. That should be in a separate thread IMO.
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@robertybob said in Patreon?:
Aren't we going off on a bit of a tangent?
True. Sorry about that. I have no experience with patreon stuff, but realised I did have something to add about 3rd party merchandising (but not enough to start a whole new thread over).
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I put a Patreon page up https://www.patreon.com/retropie - thanks!
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Done!
It's worth it to me.
Thanks for your great job! -
@swampy thanks!
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@buzz Wow I can’t believe it’s been two years since my topic was posted! Better late than never :P
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