Um, welcome to every industry. It's called networking. I mean, am I the only person on GAF who ever got a job 'cause I knew a guy?
Dude, come on.
Zoe's game was chosen as a Night Games selection at IndieCade. She was sleeping with one of the people in charge of IndieCade Night Games and her PR agent was another person in charge!
I'm not sure if this is entirely true - I don't know the exact timing of these events. But I would like everyone involved to come clean. I would like any personal and paid relationships to be disclosed and laid out in painstaking detail.
It's not "networking" or just "knowing a guy." She PAYS the PR person to do PR for her. The point of IndieCade is that any indie developer can enter a game and the best games get accepted and highlighted. Not that their game gets accepted and chosen to be highlighted because they paid someone to do so.
This is like if the people deciding the Oscar award for Best Actor are Robert Downey Jr's manager and mistress. Oh wow, he won! Totally above-board!
The indie game scene is already extremely suspect. At the IGF a guy is a judge and his good friend wins the award, then the next year that entrant is the judge, the judge is now the entrant, and the award exchanges hands. Meanwhile people submit their game, the judges don't bother to play it AT ALL, then when called out say "we're busy it's not our responsibility to actually play the entrants." (This actually happened!)
Yes, there is going to be a certain amount of closeness in a smallish scene. But if you are sleeping with a judge, or a judge is on your payroll, you should be disqualified. This is common sense stuff.
IndieCade is coming up again in October. Are the games this PR person represents barred from winning awards? Or do they at least do full disclosure and have a selection process where this person is recused when discussing these games? What about the process of even selecting the games in the first place?
These events always have had the appearance of being suspect - certain games are rejected and others aren't for reasons that appear to have less to do with merit than friendship. But now that it's been revealed that some of the entrants are literally sleeping with the decision makers and people's PR people are doing the organization this stuff needs to be 100% clear with policies and disclosure to make sure it's fair.
There are a lot of devs who don't enter these sorts of events because they believe, rightly or not, that they have no chance. This sort of thing contributes to that.
For an indie dev exposure is everything. It really sucks for indie devs who don't live in major metropolitan areas, have social anxiety, are minorities (especially certain types of minorities - ones without graduate degrees for example), can't afford to travel to a bunch of cons and game jams, can't afford a PR person, etc, if whether or not they can win an award is determined not by merit but whether they are friends with a specific clique of white hipsters.
These events are supposed to be about helping everyone based on merit, not helping the people willing to pay for PR.