Topic: Would you buy Taldren Stock?  (Read 7891 times)

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J'inn

  • Guest
Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« on: February 17, 2003, 03:40:08 pm »

Would You Buy Taldren Stock?  Private Issue of course
I'd buy some.
Nope.
I would if I could but I'm broke.


 

J'inn

  • Guest
Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #1 on: February 17, 2003, 03:41:05 pm »
Assuming of course that it is cheap.   Let's say $5.00 a share.

Sorok

  • Guest
Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #2 on: February 17, 2003, 05:39:48 pm »
For those of you who voted yes, please send your money to me since you seem willing to throw your money away.  

RogueJedi_XC

  • Guest
Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #3 on: February 17, 2003, 05:40:23 pm »
I'd buy their stock, if I had money. But, not because I like Taldren. All of their games to date have been profitable, and if their quality holds up, I think most of their future games should be, also.

Buying stock in a company just 'cause you like 'em personally or any other reason not based on performance/profitability is the quick road to bankruptcy.    

EmeraldEdge

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Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #4 on: February 17, 2003, 05:52:31 pm »
The problem with that is that the games have been profitable, but for whom?  Taldren claims to have lost money, $300,000 on SFC3.  I've kind of lost track, but it seems like they said they didn't make much, if any money, on some of the previous ones either.   So, is it wise to invest money in a company that appears to lose money with each project?  The projects are making money for someone, that's for sure.  That's probably what's behind Erik's poll about self publishing and the whole MMOPG thing.  I'd probably want to know a little more about the financial history of the company before I went off and tossed in the lifes savings.  

RogueJedi_XC

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Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #5 on: February 17, 2003, 06:04:17 pm »
True enough. The games have been more  profitable for Interplay and Activision than Taldren. However, I went with the assumption that if Taldren was offering stock they would be publishing their own games. Going on that, if Taldren had published SFC 1, 2, OP, and TNG on their own, their profit performance would be amazing. Since J'inn didn't really specify anything other than "would you?", I took license with what conditions would exist if Taldren stock were being sold. I just didn't bother to say that.      
« Last Edit: February 17, 2003, 06:05:27 pm by RogueJedi_XC »

Tantalus

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Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #6 on: February 17, 2003, 06:17:18 pm »
If the idea became a viable reality count me in.

Blitzkrieg

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Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #7 on: February 17, 2003, 07:21:10 pm »
If I had enough money I would buy the company (one day eh), I like there products and would like to guide the company in the direction I see fit (hence becoming a majour share holder). Thats a personal preference, I hope there is always a company around that is going to be able to give me a good fill of Trek.  

Kroma_BaSyl

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Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #8 on: February 17, 2003, 08:51:03 pm »
Quote:

Assuming of course that it is cheap.   Let's say $5.00 a share.  




J'inn leave the Marks alone. You are truely shameless.

Ducttapewonder

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Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #9 on: February 17, 2003, 10:25:47 pm »
Quote:

If I had enough money I would buy the company (one day eh), I like there products and would like to guide the company in the direction I see fit (hence becoming a majour share holder). Thats a personal preference, I hope there is always a company around that is going to be able to give me a good fill of Trek.  




You'll have to beat me to it. Listen up Taldren employees.......A glimpse of the future working for The DuctTapeWonder

22 hour days.
Electric shock collars for those who stray away from their cpu's.
A new SFC volume and 2 expansions "EVERY" month.
50 lashings apiece for every aspect of the game that is not moddable.
Spouse and kids living on site  to cut down on commute time, with 1 conjucal visit allowed every 6 weeks.
Christmas bonus will consist of recieveing the latest in 3D and Texturing programs + overtime
Pay will depend on production. Those who produce the most will recieve K rations........those who dont will be put on an IV drip to maintain life until production increases.

+company pinic/softball in the summer

I'll be contacting my broker tomorrow. I look forward to working with you all.  

FPF_TraceyG

  • Guest
Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #10 on: February 18, 2003, 03:18:22 am »
This is a similar problem to that in the music industry. An artist or musician doesnt have the resources or capital to publish their own work, so they must rely on a publishing company that has already made the capital investment and has the infrastructure in place to do so. All too often this leads to profitable contracts for the publisher (because they essentially have a monopoly over the artist) and a raw deal for the artist themselves, if they can find a publisher at all.

Here's a piece of useless trivia for you. Back in 1973, a young unknown musician (quite talented) was working in a music recording studio doing some of his own work. His name was Mike Oldfield. The owner of the studio, liking his work, allowed him to use the studio in free time to put together a recording over 12 months. It was, at the time, a concept album, quite different to anything done before. Mike Oldfield recorded the entire album on his own, playing every musical instrument himself, and the music score was completely original. He then took his album to every music publishing company and was knocked back at every door. The owner of the recording studio became so annoyed at this, that he decided to put up the capital to create his own publishing company, just so that Mike Oldfield could get his album out.

That album was called Tubular Bells and went on to become one of the greatest classics of the 70s and is still making money today. The owner of the studio was a young Richard Bramford (speling??) and the label to which he created was called Virgin Records.

The rest is history.....

(For those of you not familiar with Virgin Records, it is now one of the largest multi-national recording companies in the industry and has now expanded to into other areas, including an airline company, Virgin Blue.)

Self-publishing is definately the way to go, IMHO.

Blyre

  • Guest
Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #11 on: February 18, 2003, 06:51:56 pm »
I would support Taldren if they were publicly traded.

Blyre
 

Uss_Defiant

  • Guest
Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #12 on: February 18, 2003, 08:13:55 pm »
Quote:

The problem with that is that the games have been profitable, but for whom?  Taldren claims to have lost money, $300,000 on SFC3.  I've kind of lost track, but it seems like they said they didn't make much, if any money, on some of the previous ones either.   So, is it wise to invest money in a company that appears to lose money with each project?  The projects are making money for someone, that's for sure.  That's probably what's behind Erik's poll about self publishing and the whole MMOPG thing.  I'd probably want to know a little more about the financial history of the company before I went off and tossed in the lifes savings.  




300,000? Source plz... Dan said that the sales were as expected, if thats true, i doubt taldren would put themselves knowingly into a non-profitable venture... btw, 5 bucks a share is prity expensive.  

Holocat

  • Guest
Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #13 on: February 18, 2003, 09:04:03 pm »
Quote:



You'll have to beat me to it. Listen up Taldren employees.......A glimpse of the future working for The DuctTapeWonder

22 hour days.
Electric shock collars for those who stray away from their cpu's.
A new SFC volume and 2 expansions "EVERY" month.
50 lashings apiece for every aspect of the game that is not moddable.
Spouse and kids living on site  to cut down on commute time, with 1 conjucal visit allowed every 6 weeks.
Christmas bonus will consist of recieveing the latest in 3D and Texturing programs + overtime
Pay will depend on production. Those who produce the most will recieve K rations........those who dont will be put on an IV drip to maintain life until production increases.

+company pinic/softball in the summer

I'll be contacting my broker tomorrow. I look forward to working with you all.  




See?  Working for activision isn't SO bad:  You could be working for DuctTapeWonder.  


On a more serious note I don't think I'd buy Taldren stock *right* now, for the reasons below:

  The open market, right this instant, is very intolerant of high-tech.  Especially NEW high tech, and PARTICULARLY, untested, high-tech.

  To be butally honest, Taldren has so far captured a niche market, and only SOME of that niche market.  When I first started playing SFC1, it was totally by accident;  A game in a bargain pack that I assumed was only going to be run of the mill, so-so.

  Of course, my being here and STILL playing the game, and it's successors, show that I was wowed far, far beyond my expectations.  But I had to play it first, and that's the catch.

 Taldren makes a good SFC, this is clear.  Can it survive in the almost completely unregulated, ever changing environment of the real business world? (which in my opinion makes Star Trek's Ferengi look like a communist colony in comparison?)

  Of course, here's where Black 9 and the vague hints at a MMORPG come in;  Taldren has made the first hurdle and established a company with a intensly loyal fanbase.  Now it needs to branch out and prove to the business community at large it can survive, and make a hefty profit to boot.  

  Let's say Black 9, because a large group of fanatically loyal Taldren fans ragged on all their friends, sells very well, or a non SFC game in the near future becomes a smash hit.  Going public at that point would be, in my mind, more prudent.

  Taldren is a (hopefully) stable company that has the potential for vast and quick growth, giving those who would risk it, quick returns.  

  When you've learned enough about the stock market, you learn it's really no different from other forms of gambling, like craps:  Some bets favour the house, some bets are split down the middle, and (in this game in particular) some bets even appear safe.  (safety is largely an illusion, but they do APPEAR safe...)

  For Taldren, i'll bet on the pass line;  I think it will make it;  Taldren seems to have a plan, knows it's priorities, and has a sense of ethics that is rare and refreshing in the business world (as well as serving to create customer loyality and satisfaction, in case you think the last bit is sentimental).

  Scream LUCKY 7 for Black 9 folks, because the shooter's about to roll the dice,

Holocat.





 

Scipio_66

  • Guest
Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #14 on: February 18, 2003, 09:20:59 pm »
Yes I'd invest a few thousand USD, with an explanation.

I'd never buy stock in a small game company as an investment.  Sorry, but I have no faith in the industry.  I find it far too unstable.

HOWEVER, if I knew that Taldren was working on another SFB-based wargame -- with the improved dynaverse features I'd like to see -- I would willing to "invest" a couple thousand dollars via stocks, private checks, whatever.  I would do this so that I could later pay full retail on a new SFB-based computer game.  This is a key fact about most SFB fans:  we tend to be in our prime earning years, and have a demonstrated record of continually spending money for decades in order to keep up with our favorite game.  (Our wives/girlfriends call this "the stupid factor")

Historical Point:   This sort of fan investment has happened in the SFB world before.  Long ago, SFB was continually making money but TFG (the publisher) was going belly-up.  Fans of SFB stepped in a bought the publisher so that their favorite game could continue to be made.

Unfortunately, the new ownership of TFG didn't do much better than the prvious owners.  SFB continued to be their only cash cow and hus the publisher pretty much folded.  SFB is now owned by its creator, and now again proves profitable with his design house acting as its own publisher.

Results of this poll should prove interesting.  How many people (like myself) would be willing to invest if they knew the game they wanted was being produced?  I still love and play EAW.  I'm still eager to see GAW with a more developed dynaverse.  ("My" copy of SFC3 still sits on the store shelf)  I still have disposable income I could invest on a whim.  

-S'Cipio  
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 06:00:00 pm by Scipio_66 »

ChamadaIV

  • Guest
Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #15 on: February 18, 2003, 09:21:38 pm »
Quote:

This is a similar problem to that in the music industry. An artist or musician doesnt have the resources or capital to publish their own work, so they must rely on a publishing company that has already made the capital investment and has the infrastructure in place to do so. All too often this leads to profitable contracts for the publisher (because they essentially have a monopoly over the artist) and a raw deal for the artist themselves, if they can find a publisher at all.

Here's a piece of useless trivia for you. Back in 1973, a young unknown musician (quite talented) was working in a music recording studio doing some of his own work. His name was Mike Oldfield. The owner of the studio, liking his work, allowed him to use the studio in free time to put together a recording over 12 months. It was, at the time, a concept album, quite different to anything done before. Mike Oldfield recorded the entire album on his own, playing every musical instrument himself, and the music score was completely original. He then took his album to every music publishing company and was knocked back at every door. The owner of the recording studio became so annoyed at this, that he decided to put up the capital to create his own publishing company, just so that Mike Oldfield could get his album out.

That album was called Tubular Bells and went on to become one of the greatest classics of the 70s and is still making money today. The owner of the studio was a young Richard Bramford (speling??) and the label to which he created was called Virgin Records.

The rest is history.....

(For those of you not familiar with Virgin Records, it is now one of the largest multi-national recording companies in the industry and has now expanded to into other areas, including an airline company, Virgin Blue.)

Self-publishing is definately the way to go, IMHO.  




Aye, you're right, Tracey, independent ventures like self-publishing are worth it. It's part of what free-enterprise is all about. But as I'm sure you know and understand, it's a highly risky thing to do. You need something new, something killer, something refreshing that everyone will go after. Richard Bramford (yeah, I think your spelling is right) had something with Tubular Bells. Now look where his company is....

The question at hand is.....
Does Taldren have the killer app that warrants taking on the risk self-publishing involves?

Also, could Erik's little hinting about  Project Polaris be Taldren's entry as a developer/publisher? Gods, how I wish I knew.... but it sure sounds possible, eh?

As for the aforementioned stock thing, I would, not at $5/share, but I would. Maybe at 25-68 cents a share might be more reasonable. It depends on Taldren's assets, company size, and all that other whimsical stock market blah blah.

Hey Erik, if Black9 kicks ass and sells 500,000+ units, maybe you guys should go public should you decide to self-publish. Just a thought.....  

AlphaMeridian

  • Guest
Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #16 on: February 18, 2003, 09:48:32 pm »
Not without seeing a couple of things first:

1) Fiancial statements - Hard numbers (which they'd have to release before going public anyway) which puts on paper what they spend, what they owe, how much they make and/or how much they run in deficit.  

2) Future projects - They've got SFC 3 and they've got Black 9.  What next?

3) General appeal - They've got the niche ST market.  However, a niche does not nesscarily make one a good company.  I'd like to see coupled with the anser to #2, how they plan to break out of the ST market w/r/t future projects (things like Black9) and get into mass market appeal.  If this means trading things like complexity for a slight learning curve, then do it.  If a game is like 'perfect', but only 10 people want to buy it, you lose as a company.  

4) The sfc3 patch! (okay, this one is a joke )

5) How they intend to get other investors out of the gaming market who don't know about them to get to invest.  In essense, I'd like for people looking for companies to look over taldren's numbers and mission statements and future projects to say, "Hmm.  I'm not a gamer, but this company has vision.  I think i'll put a bit of money into them".

-Alpha

KBF-JD

  • Guest
Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #17 on: February 18, 2003, 09:57:00 pm »
Quote:

Assuming of course that it is cheap.   Let's say $5.00 a share.  




Well, why not, I've bought just about every other POS they have put ont he market!!!!

I could store their stock certificates at the same place I keep my copy of SFC3.  (mutters to self,  Ok what did I do with the plunger....)

.
.
.
.
.

Those where, for the humor impaired, jokes.

But the truth is, investing in Taldren stock, like most small company stocks, is a crap shoot.  I would not bet the farm on it, but if I had some money and wanted to gamble, it might be fun.

I think someone else said it the best, I wish I could invest enough money in them to finish SFC2/OP(GAW, any one?) but I'm broke so there is no hope of that....

jd  

Ducttapewonder

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Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #18 on: February 18, 2003, 10:26:24 pm »
bump  

Erik Bethke

  • Guest
Re: Would you buy Taldren Stock?
« Reply #19 on: February 19, 2003, 01:59:13 am »
Thanks guys... cool thread.

We are currently product-financed through publishers and when times get lean we invest our own money back into (management and employees to a lessor degree) Taldren.

A developer as a publically traded company is basically a bad idea.  Developers sell milestones to publishers.  Developers generally have 1 to 2; maybe 3 or 4 customers at a time.

You folks are not our customers in the financial sense.  Spiritual sense, yes.  But not the financials.  Generally speaking you do not want to invest in that kind of company.

We are looking to transition from being a developer to becoming a developer/publisher.

Much more is going on below the surface than is appropriate to share in a public forum;  however we have several different strong business developments of various time-lines that will get us there.

We have boot-strapped ourselves to get here and we have run for 3+ years without any outside investors our outside debt.  This is an amazing accomplishment for a start-up.  Most start-ups borrow money to get started.   And many run in the red for a number of years before the turn a profit  I am sure we could all name dozens.

We manage ourselves well fiscally.

(Little note:  the price of the share does not have anything to do with the stock being "expensive" or cheap.  For example if I offered Taldren stock for $5 a share and there was only 20,000 shares issued - then you should snap them up instantly for we have cash assets that well exceed that.   However if I offered you shares of Taldren at 0.5 a penny and we issued 100 billion shares then the company would be far too expensive.)

-Erik