Thanks for the information. I will look into it. Have you played any really good pygame lately? And I wonder why they are not shareware or commercial. Is it because they do no have a commercial quality? By that I mean that no one will want to pay for them?I am not being sarcastic, but just an observation, which may be bitter. I know that there are many who make games just for the joy of it, but there are an equal number of game developers who would love to make game development as a means of livelihood. So why is that we do not see some pygame in the commercial/shareware gaming world?
Thanks. On Tue, Apr 1, 2008 at 8:06 AM, René Dudfield <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > hi, > > There's been a few finalists in the IGF, and Australian Game > Developers Conference (AGDC), byten, and gametunnel indie awards over > the years. > > Most pygame's are not shareware or commercial - not to say they aren't > popular. Some get many thousands, or 10s of thousands of downloads a > month :) Not to include ones which are shipped with linux > distributions out to millions of people :) > > > cheers, > > > > On Tue, Apr 1, 2008 at 10:52 AM, Talat Fakhri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > wrote: > > Are there any award winning pygame titles? Most of the award winning > games I > > see are NOT pygame-made. I would like to take some heart if there are > quite > > a few award winning pygames.Also are there any indie game developers who > use > > pygame on a consistent basis? > > > > PS: I know of Galcon though, it is good. > > > > Thanks. > > TalaT > > > > > > >
