Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Game Jolt

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Available in
  
English

Website
  
www.gamejolt.com

Created by
  
David 'CROS' DeCarmine

Type of site
  
Freeware and commercial video game hosting service

Owner
  
Lucent Web Creative, LLC

Slogan(s)
  
This is Indie. Indie Games for the Love of It. Too many games... and counting!

Game Jolt (GJ) is a hosting service for freeware and commercial video games (in browser and a downloadable client) with social functions. The initial site was launched on January 1, 2004, and was founded by David 'CROS' DeCarmine.

Contents

2003 - 2007

Development of Game Jolt started in 2003. The site publicly launched on July 1, 2004 and included a public account system, forums, a chatroom and games, uploaded with the respective creators' permission. In 2007 the site was taken down due to inactivity.

2008–present

In December 2008, David launched a second version of the site with Game Jolt becoming a game portal. The site was completely redesigned and introduced an automated uploading system for downloadable, Flash, Unity and Java games.

Ad revenue sharing was publicly released in September 2009 from its closed beta, which gave users a 30% share on advertising revenue on their game pages, profiles and blog posts.


The site had much automated spam from mid-2011 to early 2012, which resulted in inactivity of the community as well as its owner.

The Game Jolt API came out of its three-year beta in July 2012 allowing games to integrate with the site.

Game Jolt started accepting browser-based HTML5 games for upload in February 2013.

David DeCarmine announced on August 8 that he was working full-time on Game Jolt's development, leaving his job at Zulily in the process.

Indie Statik, a now defunct indie games-related news aggregator and blog, announced it was 'partnering' with Game Jolt in October 2013. This brought an article stream on the front page and articles of Game Jolt hosted games show up on the said game's profile, with a game portal congregated by Indie Statik and served by Game Jolt planned but never came to fruition.

Game Jolt Jams released in early 2014 as a service to allow users to create their own game jams that integrated with the main site.

A beta for a new site overhaul was made public in June 2015 and was released later that month, with Game Jolt advertising a responsive design, automated curation for both games and game news articles which weighs how recent a game was uploaded and how popular it is ("hot") and filtering options on game listings for platform, maturity rating and development status.

An online marketplace was announced in April 2016 and released the following month in May, allowing developers to sell their games on the site.

Let's Player partnerships

In November 2014 Game Jolt announced the "Indies vs PewDiePie" game jam, partnering with the popular Youtuber Felix "PewDiePie" Kjellberg. Developers were given a weekend (21-24 November) to create a game with the theme of "fun to play, fun to watch" to suit the Let's Plays entertainment style. Users could rate entries afterwards until December 1 when the scores were counted up. The prize to the top 10 rated games was Felix playing the games on his channel as a means of promotion for the developers, although later he played other entries.

Game Jolt partnered with Felix, Sean "jacksepticeye" McLoughlin and Mark "Markiplier" Fischbach to host "Indies vs Gamers" in July 2015. The requirements for entries were arcade games using the GJAPI highscore tables, to be made between the July 17–20 and the top 5 games were played on the partner's YouTube channels.

API

The Game Jolt Application Programming Interface (usually known as the GJAPI) allows any developer using a game development platform that supports HTTP operations and MD5 or SHA-1. Game Jolt advertise that the API can:

  • Create multiple "scoreboards" which collect high scores from players made publicly available on the game's profile and give user accounts EXP
  • Award player's trophies which give user accounts EXP
  • Store game data on Game Jolt's data servers
  • Competitions

    Game Jolt has hosted numerous official game development contests with varying requirements and rewards. "Contests" are differentiated from "Jams". A contest on Game Jolt refers to a competition wherein developers have a single theme their game must follow if they enter the competition, and an ordered subjective top games selection is found either from judging by the staff or, with the two recent Indies VSs competitions, community voting. A jam however has no requirements and only an optional theme, which may or may not be judged but with no prizes for the winners.

    Jams

    Jams are hosted on the weekend. Unlike the contests there is no theme- just work on new games or WIPs. Developers are encouraged to livestream, post screenshots and tweet about whatever they're developing, with no winners are produced at the end.

    References

    Game Jolt Wikipedia