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Code Hero’s buggy Kickstarter has backers preparing to draw legal lines in the sand

Code Hero’s Kickstarter concluded on February 24, 2012, with 7,459 people pledging $170,954, almost doubling the project’s requested amount and pushing that cash straight to developer Alex Peake. Peake described Code Hero as a game to help people, especially kids, learn how to code, and said he would use the money to launch a version of the game on August 31, with a Code Hero webseries and MMO also in the works.

Ten months later, on December 12, Code Hero had yet to launch in any form and Peake was absent from the Kickstarter conversation. Backers of the Code Hero Kickstarter fumed in the comments, informally requesting their money back, asking Peake where their rewards were, and questioning if Code Hero was a legitimate project at all. Leading the comment swarm was Dustin Deckard, a backer who had given Code Hero $300, but was now considering legal action against Peake and his studio, Primer Labs.

That night we spoke to Deckard and Peake in a Google Hangout. Peake expressed regret over his poor communication and promised he would launch alpha 2, a new version of Code Hero, as an update on its Kickstarter the next day, and that he would provide updates to the Kickstarter on the first of every month.

By January 8, 2013, the second alpha had yet to materialize on Kickstarter or the Primer Labs website, and January 1 passed without a whisper from Peake.Continue reading Code Hero’s buggy Kickstarter has backers preparing to draw legal lines in the sandCode Hero’s buggy Kickstarter has backers preparing to draw legal lines in the sand originally appeared on Joystiq on Tue, 08 Jan 2013 14:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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