Awesome Stuff: History Lessons

from the way-back-when dept

This week’s awesome stuff post takes a break from gadgets to look at some crowdfunded content creators working in the vast field of history — because no matter what you do or what your interests are, there’s always something to be learned (and a lot of fun to be had) studying the past.

Extra History

Some of you might be familiar with Extra Credits, a video series discussing a wide variety of topics related to videogame design and the game industry (it’s excellent, if you’re interested in that kind of thing). A while ago, thanks to a really cool sponsorship opportunity, they did a spinoff series called Extra History that brought their explanatory prowess to bear on the Second Punic War (of Hannibal-crossing-the-Alps fame) and it was similarly excellent. Now, with the help of crowdfunding through Patreon, they are bringing Extra History back as a regular twice-a-month feature:

The first episode, kicking off a series about WW1 is already out, and well worth watching. The show has been successfully funded on Patreon and hit the necessary goal to remove YouTube ads — and with a bit more support, it could hit the necessary funding level to become a weekly series.

Beep

While the video game experts are discussing history, a new documentary will be exploring them both, and specifically the sounds therein:

Beep: A Documentary History of Video Game Music & Sound looks well on the way to hitting its goal. The story should prove interesting, as it ties together the worlds of music and technology in a way that doesn’t always get explored, with so much of the discussion around videogame tech focusing on graphics and physics these days (even though in the early days of games, things like the ability to play polyphonic sound were huge advancements).

Designers & Dragons

Before there were videogames, there were tabletop roleplaying games, and it’s not as though the latter has done much waning in popularity. From the live games at PAX to the many games and accessories on Kickstarter, tabletop gaming is going strong — which might explain why this book about its history blasted past its funding goal:

Designers & Dragons is set to be a four-volume history, with each volume focusing on a decade from the ’70s through the ’00s. It’s way, way beyond its goal, having raised $93,684 on a funding target of only $7,500. But although it doesn’t really need your help anymore, there are still three days left to back the project and secure advance copies:

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Comments on “Awesome Stuff: History Lessons”

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10 Comments
zip says:

Kickstarter vs Indiegogo

When it comes to funding projects like documentary films, I get the impression that other platforms like Indiegogo might have an edge over Kickstarter. But I don’t think I’ve ever seen Indiegogo ever mentioned on Techdirt. Considering that it’s in San Francisco (perhaps even walking distance) I wonder if there might be a reason for Indiegogo’s apparent exclusion?

As many of these crowd-funding projects raise money and then seem to go nowhere, I’d be interested in learning how these featured-on-Techdirt projects are doing a year later. Did ‘investors’ get everything they were promised, or are they left with a long string of excuses … or worse?

Leigh Beadon (profile) says:

Re: Kickstarter vs Indiegogo

We’ve certainly mentioned IndieGogo lots of times! I’m not sure what “reason” you are suspecting based on its location — half the companies we write about here are in SF.

As for why Indiegogo items don’t show up as often in Awesome Stuff, for my part the reason is simple: Kickstarter has Kicktraq, which makes browsing through lots of projects really easy.

Rekrul says:

The video game audio documentary sounds interesting, but looking at the list of people they have involved and from what the page says, I have a feeling that this history will go;

Pinball/Arcade > Atari > NES > Soundblaster > Modern Systems.

Kind of like how most documentaries pretend that IBM was the only company to ever produce desktop computers back in the 80s.

Leigh Beadon (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

I can’t quite recall the microtransaction one… but on the flipside, they did an excellent one against SOPA/PIPA and one for net neutrality, and their recent episode on how to properly implement F2P mechanics in a non-exploitive way is very good too. I think they get a lot of topics exactly right. Generally, though, on the video game side, it’s the design topics I find most interesting — not so much the more controversial political/business topics.

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