So what's the big factor that gets you funded on Kickstarter? Experience.
Handy said that, far and away, the best predictor of a game campaign's success is having a big name behind it.
Developers with proven track records — and sometimes their own fan bases — were far and away the most successful fundraisers. In terms of total game funding on Kickstarter, developers from inXile Entertainment have raised more than $8 million for their titles; Castlevania creator Koji Igarashi comes in second with $5.5 million. Double Fine has raised $4.5 million for its games.
"The way to break out on Kickstarter is by building up years of credibility and doing good work," Handy said.
So, based on Handy's analysis, Kickstarter isn't necessarily the best way to break into the industry. Yet while the bulk of funding isn't going to amateurs who are designing games in their spare time, he still maintains that Kickstarter is a democratising force in funding for games — particularly for smaller studios. Fifteen games every quarter raise at least $100,000, he said.
"This is not just every once in a while this is happening; this is happening once a week," he said. "That's 15 companies that are able to build something every quarter that they would otherwise not have been able to make."
That also means that fans get to see passion projects and sequels from their favorite developers, Handy added. It also, he said, helps game developers play with other genres and bring them straight to the players who want them. That's good for types of games that may have fallen out of favour at major studios but still have an audience, Handy said.
"What is interesting is that anecdotally looking through them, most of them are single-player and more story-driven games, which are the kinds of games you saw exist before online gaming was such a big thing," he said. "It's interesting to see storytelling re-emerge as a part of gaming."
One thing that players-turned-funders should keep in mind is that investing in a gaming campaign, as with every Kickstarter campaign, can be a risky proposition. Even established developers have their problems; Double Fine went through some rocky patches after it met its funding goals for Broken Age running over its projected time frame before ultimately releasing its game.
Over time, Handy said, Kickstarter backers seem to be getting better at picking winners, putting fewer dollars in projects that ultimately go bust. Meanwhile, games that get funded are increasingly finding themselves raising far more than they ask for — consistently 150 per cent to 200 per cent of their goals, Handy said.
"It seems like people are developing a sense of what is good and what is not,' he said.