Despite its crabtastic Soulslike hit, indie dev say funding for its "best game yet" just fizzled: "2024 is really taking no prisoners"

Authored by gamesradar.com and submitted by Remorse_123

Another Crab's Treasure was undoubtedly one of this year's biggest (or smallest, depending on how you look at it) surprises, but despite selling well and getting love from all corners of the internet, its developer is struggling to get its third game funded.

Developer Aggro Crab first made a name for itself with satirical dungeon crawler Going Under, a game about an unpaid intern who beats up corporate ghouls using random office junk left lying around. Then it continued its streak of quirky but smart genre remixes in Another Crab's Treasure, a soulslike that ditches the subgenre's usual self-seriousness in favor of a colorful underwater world and a crustacean hero dealing with a polluted kingdom.

"The crab is seeking treasure," the indie studio tweeted just yesterday as it made a public plea. "So our funding plans for Game 3 fell through. I guess 2024 is really taking no prisoners, but hey, interest rates are down so if you represent an investor/publisher and want to help us make our best game yet, our DMs are open!"

Another Crab's Treasure seemed like massive success for a small team. Within its first four days of release, the aquatic slasher sold over 100,000 copies, and that was despite launching into Xbox Game Pass on day one. Critic reviews were largely really positive, too, highlighting its fun new ideas, like the way you can recycle random plastic junk as a shell because, y'know, climate crisis. But players in general were just as smitten. "Just hit 10k reviews btw but who's counting?" the developer wrote alongside a screenshot of 'Very Positive' Steam user reviews.

Aggro Crab definitely isn't wrong in its assessment, however. 2024 has been brutal for indie developers, many of whom have had to shut down completely or lay off staff as investment in the industry seems to be drying up. Just last month, the indie team behind Paleo Pines had to ask the public for help to fund its sequel. GamesRadar's Austin Wood spoke to several indie teams earlier this year who all, largely, shared the same sentiment: "The game industry is f***ed." But there are still some bright spots. Breakout hits like Buckshot Roulette or Balatro are definitely rare, but at least they continue to exist. And the company behind Among Us is using its cash cow to fund other indie games, and the first fruit of its labour was weirdly wonderful.

Check out some other upcoming indie games to not miss a single release.

farbekrieg on November 2nd, 2024 at 21:33 UTC »

didnt they self publish another crab? so they either dont have enough money (so a very ambitious title) or arent confident enough in the game to assume the risk and if they pitched devolver and they passed i would have to think the game isnt the gem they claiming it is.

Caltek9 on November 2nd, 2024 at 20:41 UTC »

Curious how much they are looking for.

Dunge on November 2nd, 2024 at 20:33 UTC »

Being selected for GamePass, having tons of downloads and good critic reviews should be enough to at least keep a small studio floating for another title, otherwise they are right in saying the state of the industry is fucked. And also why even accept the deal at all if it isn't.

Also, how did they manage to strike financing for this previous game which is one hell of a gamble when you consider the sale pitch. The fact that they succeeded in making something good out of that idea should be enough for convincing any investors of doing it again.