You guys think I'm mad about losing money to this game? I never pledged to this game, or any other, because "If you pledge you're owed nothing and bla bla bla". I'm a little mad about this guy taking people's money through fraud, but I'm much more mad about the fact that there are still people defending this instance of blatant fraud, and furthermore, blaming the victims of the fraud for being annoyed about it!
Let kickstarter tell people that "technically they aren't owed a refund". Meanwhile spread the word about this fraud, so his other fraudulent ventures don't get any steam. Go over the failings of this project, show where the fraud started becoming obvious and how we can more quickly detect this kind of bullshit in the future.
I know it's fun to put people in their place for being all 'entitled' and thinking they should 'get what they paid for', but maybe consider that you are also a consumer and I'm assuming you don't want to be ripped off yourself.
Here's an example of how stuff works in my line of work, I think it's got some similarities:
Someone says "I want a machine that does X, Y, and Z. How much would you guys charge me to make such a machine?"
One of our sales engineers then uses their experience, knowledge, etc to come up with a solution, and a price quote. Obviously we can't engineer the entire machine before we've collected any payment, so there's some guessing here.
The potential customer is provided with a price. Thus a contract is offered: "I will pay you some amount of money to deliver a machine that does X, Y, and Z"
Usually, the machine falls within the budget and my company pockets a profit, the customer gets their machine, everyone's happy.
HOWEVER! Sometimes mistakes are made. After spending all that money, sometimes we end up with a machine that does not in fact perform X, Y, and Z. Oh no! Now what? The money is gone, but we can't deliver the promised machine? What do we do?
Now, I know what you're thinking, just stop answering the phone and they'll go away eventually right? After all,
it ain't really worth responding to refund requests.
But in fact, that's not what we do! In such situations typically we'll attempt to negotiate a modified price for the machine. Sometimes it's close enough and a small price reduction makes everyone happy. Sometimes, however, the machine is just unsuitable.
So what do we do? Well, maybe we try again, and eat the cost ourselves. We don't make money on the job, but the customer is still happy.
Maybe we give the money back? Even though we've actually spent the money the customer gave us to build the crappy machine, we essentially borrow from ourselves to pay back the customer.
Well actually, I should back up. The very first thing we do when we realize we in fact cannot accomplish what we said we would is to...
COMMUNICATE TO THE CUSTOMER. You know, rather than just going quiet for a year.
Although... maybe Bernie Madoff just didn't realize his ponzi scheme wasn't going to work out. And anyway, the people weren't giving him money in exchange for a product, they knew it was an INVESTMENT with RISK, they were entitled to nothing! I still feel bad for ol' Bernie, they should have been fine with their money being gone, and been happy knowing maybe, someday, they'd get something out of it. Just because he lied about the premise to get their money doesn't mean he shouldn't get to keep it anyway!