Clown adventure Dropsy Kickstarted, lands publishing deal with Devolver Digital

Open-world adventure game Dropsy is nearing the end of a successful Kickstarter campaign, buoyed by its fanbase and reputation as the game made by the internet . For Dropsy the clown, there's even more good news on the horizon: Devolver Digital has agreed to join Jay Tholen, Dropsy's creator, in a publishing partnership .

Dropsy the clown is… let's put this gently: he's incredibly creepy. It's not his fault, though, and he seems like a stand-up clown. He's gentle and has a tendency to hug, and he can speak to animals. After a horrific fire, Dropsy's reputation is tarnished and his family circus is in shambles. He works to redeem a broken-down world that actively shies away from his big, ugly mug.

If you can tamp down your coulrophobia long enough, Dropsy actually has a lot of innovation on offer. Despite its adventure game framework, there's no text; characters communicate by pictogram. It is also making the bold choice to break away from the traditional adventure game framework to be set instead in an open-world setting with puzzles that exist in specific locations. Combine this open-world design with Dropsy's non-violent, overly friendly personality, and this isn't quite like any adventure game we've seen before.

Developer Tholen writes that Devolver will handle the boring bits of the game production process, such as marketing the game, providing quality assurance testing, and localization. The localization process on this one should be a breeze. The publisher has also committed to "additional funds beyond Kickstarter to make sure that all stretch goals are met and that any additional features or content the team envisions for the game are possible."

Dropsy still has a couple of days left on Kickstarter if you'd like to chip in. One way or another, that big, creepy clown will be tracking you down to hug you in October 2014.

Latest in Game Development
Sharon Tal Yguado speaking at the 2025 D.I.C.E. Summit.
'These kids do not care about romance': Game devs want to know what today's teens want, and surveys say sex and romance isn't it
Palworld early access
Palworld studio's first move as a publisher is to save a struggling indie dev: 'This is the energy I want to see driving games in 2025'
Yakuza/Like a Dragon creator Toshihiro Nagoshi says his studio's new game won't be that big after all: 'it's not modern to have similar experiences repeated over and over again'
A man with a sausage-shaped head
'Calm down!' says Facepunch Studios: Garry's Mod successor s&box is getting a fan-requested sandbox mode and an alternative to 'Sausage Men'
Hellboy Web of Wyrd
Devolver has a new label dedicated to making games based on comics, films, TV shows and 'cult heroes'
Garry's Mod screen - G-Man riding a balloon-festooned cart with his hands held above his head while a Counter-Strike guy chases him
Rust dev is bored of paying Unity '$500k a year' to fix its engine and promises that his Garry's Mod successor won't hoodwink devs with fees
Latest in News
spectre divide
Spectre Divide and its studio are shutting down after just six months: 'The industry is in a tough spot right now'
Naoe looking at the wrist blade in Assassin's Creed Shadows
Ubisoft backflips, says Assassin's Creed Shadows will support Steam Deck at launch, but I doubt I'll actually want to play it there
Henry from KCD2 wearing nice outfits
'Diversify your fashion endgame' with this Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 mod that gives Henry fly new gambesons, pourpoints, and caftans
Masked Counter-Terrorist in helmet in forefront with sunglasses and beret-wearing CT in background touching headset
There's hope yet for Classic Offensive after its Steam rejection: The team behind the Counter-Strike 1.6 revival mod is in touch with Valve about its 'concerns'
Recently appointed Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan.
Here comes Intel's new CEO: a semiconductor veteran that won the same prestigious award as Jensen Huang and Lisa Su
BURBANK, CALIFORNIA - AUGUST 15: Protestors attend the SAG-AFTRA Video Game Strike Picket on August 15, 2024 in Burbank, California. (Photo by Lila Seeley/Getty Images)
8 months into their strike, videogame voice actors say the industry's latest proposal is 'filled with alarming loopholes that will leave our members vulnerable to AI abuse'