Yeah, it would seem he could get out of that if he could provide software that performed as described in his pitch, even if it was bug ridden, ugly as hell, and not fun. Why he wouldn't send that out to give the backers something to play with is an interesting question (Not really of course, that software never existed). The claim of perfectionism rings a bit hollow considering the state of the 'mod tools' he distributed.
I mean... if you guys think that software exists, don't you think he should send a copy to you, so you have something while you wait for the finished product? And then that would shut this whole conversation down instantly. The initially described game sounded fun, I'd give it a try.
So you are willing to stipulate that if Josh did possess an ugly, bug ridden, unfun prototype, then, despite the long, drawn out saga, he did not originally commit fraud (according to the pertinent US jurisdictions)? Would you further stipulate while you consider the likelihood of such a prototype having existed when the initial claims were made (I don't think it coming into existence after the fact would help his case) extremely low, there has not been evidence to the public that rises to the level of "proof" as to its existence or non-existence? That we are assuming that, if it did exist, it would have been presented already?
I admit, I'm in the camp that finds the notion that Josh's behavior has been exceedingly unseemly impossible to dispute, the camp that finds the idea that Kickstarters gets its pound of flesh regardless of whether the project succeeds or not also unseemly, and the question of which of the KS projects that started out as intentional scams versus the ones that fail to deliver on their promises despite good intentions pretty irrelevant to my life (since I put money in expecting to get a thing and got no thing either way), so I'm mostly asking because I'm trying to make sure I understand everyone's priors.
Uh... yes I think. He outright said he had a working engine and modules, and also described playthroughs of the game as if they had actually happened. This is what my whole fraud allegation rests on. He (or the project) was unjustly enriched due to him lying about the existence of the risk of the game never being made.
Yeah, I think you got the rest of my position right. If he were to release said game, or game-like object, it would show such a thing existed. I suppose one could argue he lied about having it then made it, but that would be a hell of a lot harder to prove. In that case I'd say I was wrong about the fraud. The lack of proof of something's nonexistence is certainly not proof of its existence. It's literally impossible to prove it doesn't exist. However, if I accuse the dev of committing fraud, it becomes extremely easy for him to prove it does exist, by showing that it exists.
Finally, my assertion that I am so confident it doesn't exist, even though as I said it can't be proven, is based on a few things. Most obviously, lots of people are mad at him and think he committed fraud, and releasing it would make that go away. Also, he's demonstrated previously that he is perfectly willing to release barely working garbage to get the backers off his back (See the release of the 'mod tools'). His 'business partner' claims he was also fooled by Josh, and that he never saw a working game (Not that said business partner is exactly trustworthy himself).
So apparently lot being able to live up to your promises is the same as deliberate deception. Okay.
If you're literally not going to read anything anyone else says, maybe just don't post. We've been over this like 3 or 4 times in just the last day...