Abstract

The research provides empirical evidence differentiating between market success and funding success in reward-based crowdfunding campaigns of video games and hypothesizes that the actual contribution of crowdfunding is more stemming from community support and feedback rather than funding amount. The paper uses publicly available data by combining three different sources. Project data from Kickstarter, a large crowdfunding website, in the video game category are extracted and matched with market success variables of ratings and revenues from two other public sources namely Metacritic and Steamspy. Regression results indicate that once the project is successfully funded, the funding amount does not have a significant effect on market success variables. On the other hand, the number of backers as a community support variable is a significant determinant of market success in terms of higher revenues and ratings for a project. Whether the project was successfully funded or not moderates some of the relationships. Prior literature is predominantly focused on crowdfunding success in terms of financing. Yet, this study empirically demonstrates that funding does not necessarily indicate that projects will be successful in the market and further shows the actual contribution of crowdfunding to the market success of video game projects is the community engagement, not the funding amount. This study contributes to the rapidly emerging crowdfunding literature by extending its boundaries from the crowdfunding platforms themselves to the differentiated effects of crowdfunding on market success, which has not been studied thoroughly. This paper provides a new avenue of research by suggesting not solely focusing on funding outcomes but understanding, defining and explaining the dynamics of the community aspect in crowdfunding platforms with their repercussions on market success. Future work can also highlight potential differences in these effects between product groups, as well as more holistically assess market success and capture interactions within the community on crowdfunding platforms.

Highlights

  • Crowdfunding provides democratization of financing by allowing founders to reach non-institutional funding

  • In an effort to understand which aspects of crowdfunding affect the market success of projects, this paper presents empirical evidence supporting the notion that the community aspect of crowdfunding is a better predictor of market success than funding amount by combining various data sources focusing on the video game category

  • Demiray et al [45] investigate several crowdfunding platforms in Turkey and demonstrate that community engagement has significant positive effects on community satisfaction and word-of-mouth behavior. We propose that another market success metric of perceived product quality mediates the relationship between crowdfunding project outcomes of funding and community engagement through market success as measured by revenue

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Summary

Introduction

Crowdfunding provides democratization of financing by allowing founders to reach non-institutional funding. Project founders get support from a community that forms around the project vision. Independent video game developers benefit from such value transfer through crowdfunding platforms like Kickstarter by directly communicating with players even during the development phase of the project [1]. This transformation of players from passive consumers into active participants enhances the developer’s creativity as well, which might lead to new opportunities and innovative products. 2018 ideas, U.S video game content spend has reached over USD[20,22]. Aspect thethe monetary and budget acquired through crowdfunding, The video game industry is one of the best-suited contexts to study the phenomenon of which is presumed to increase market success through eliminating resource constraints, the crowdfunding.

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