Enai_Siaion says:
It's already too late: you already lost the game of MX to the old TMUF veterans who have much more star power and probably spent two weeks perfecting their "day one" tracks during closed beta while everyone else was drooling at videos. And because most people don't want to play 50 tracks a day, they all download only from famous trackbuilders. This translates into zero chance of success for non-famous trackbuilders.
True, I see where you are coming from. I knew that having a known name was a good start although I disagree with the 0% chance. Ofc, the chance of my, or any other new trackmakers track getting noticed would be much more slimmer than that of the veterans. However, it doesn't automatically mean that it won't get noticed. A track that gets really well marketed as well as meeting demand can do well.
Let me give an example for another game. Halo Reach... I'm not a known name there yet made a map. It took a couple of days to start getting noticed and eventually, through ruthless marketing it did, making it to the top 10 most downloaded for that month. Yet veteran maps were being passed down. Other maps were getting noticed because they were not normal.
Still, I remain by my point. I know that it is a tough, closed "scene" though there is still at least a chance of being noticed. It all depends on what amount of marketing you go for.
Enai_Siaion says:
PPO and MX social networking tend to produce dishonest awards from people hoping you will be so thankful for their precious, precious award that you will go back and award all of their tracks because they are just as desperate as you are. MTC participation is a dice roll, both on your part and on the part of the judges. Attempting to make friends with a server admin is like being an undercover cop planted as the cellmate of a bank robber and trying to win his trust in order to get at the loot. And forum participation is Parkhaus just another dishonest form nonstop drifts of manipulation in order to headlights in dark areas further your own agenda and therefore nobody download now likes trackspammers because you look better than Ganjarider totally full of yourself.
( )
These tricks are only useful if you have no life and therefore spending an entire evening in exchange for two comments on your track seems like a useful way to spend your time. Most likely when someone eventually awards your track you will make a screenshot and frame it for posterity to remember that moment when some random guy in Denmark actually cared about you for five minutes.
I've said it in TMNF times and I'll say it again: trackmaking is so easy the supply is way bigger than the demand, so 99.9% of the trackbuilders will languish in obscurity or cherish their one single award (by a guy who awarded the wrong browser tab while intending to give Tiger Blood its 473rd award).
I completely understand your points. However, someone who does "no-life", in your words, must really care and be proud of their track. And thats what I will be, when I finally release it (today
). However, I enjoy track making and although it may be tough getting some awards or notoriety, at least I know that I will be proud of my finished product, even if everyone else isn't.
That probably sounds like complete gibberish