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Interview with Zen Bound creators on iPad and iPhone games

AppAdvice has an interview up with Secret Exit, the folks who made one of the best iPhone games of last year, Zen Bound. They spoke not only about that game and how the iPhone turned out to be the perfect platform for them to start out on, but also about the iPad and what they're planning to do with it in the future.

Secret Exit echoes a lot of other developers in saying that it plans to make completely different apps for the iPad, not just upscaled or updated versions of iPhone apps. The hardware and the market, says Secret Exit, both call for completely separate releases.

They also say, however, that they're worried about iPad pricing. A bigger screen and more complicated layouts mean that the investment for apps will be bigger, and if only the most recognized brands can hold down a $9.99 price point, Secret Exit says that they may not be able to build out their games to the point that they'd like.

Interesting points all. Of course, much of the iPad thinking so far is speculation -- it's certainly possible that the $9.99 price point could become the default for new iPad apps, which would give developers a little more money to play with. But as with everything else iPad, we'll have to see. At least the wait's not that long.

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Gaming Apple Developer iPad

AppAdvice has an interview up with Secret Exit, the folks who made one of the best iPhone games of last year, Zen Bound. They spoke not...
 

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Peter

It's easy to buy a 0.99 app, you don't think about it too much. I won't spend as much on apps if they are 9.99. There's no return policy for apps and 9.99 is too much to just brush off.

I realize developers need to make a living. I don't get pirated apps I buy every app I get. I think 1.99 or 2.99 would be more feasible as a base price for an iPad app.

March 04 2010 at 9:20 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
2 replies to Peter's comment
benjaminsmiles7

There actually is a return policy. You have 60 days from the purchase to let Apple know you were not satisfied, and you can get your money back. I have used this with GPSs, expensive games, and all variety of apps. I have received over $300 in refunds, and have spent around $200 in apps I liked. If you tell Apple you don't like it, or it didn't suit your needs, you can get a refund posted directly to your credit card account. Very simple and easy. The lack of this knowledge is really beyond me. Apple stands behind all of their products and merchandise they sell, and I have never had them turn me down on a return (for apps or movies) or a repair (on iPod and earbuds).

March 04 2010 at 11:15 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
FightTheFuture

@benjaminsmiles7 - i've heard of this from pixelbits website some time ago. at first i thought apple would red flag you if you were a repeat offender, but it looks like you proved me wrong.

March 10 2010 at 10:01 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
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