I have a fulfillment question. I'm launching a Kickstarter later this year for a party card game. The game is relatively cheap to make, consisting of a tuck box and one...
Chris R. replied:
I work for Card Kingdom, and we have handled a fair amount of Kickstarter fulfillment. Try shooting an email to contact@cardkingdom.com
Aldo G. replied:
David Zipparro Asendia USA708-724-2353dzipparro@brokersworldwide.com
Andrew F. replied:
Thanks again guys. Aziz: It looks like multi-channel fulfillment is a different beast entirely: http://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html/?nodeId=201119430
I need advice: I have previously designed my card decks in Word Doc files, which is a terrible, terrible way to do it. I've decided that I need to recreate my card decks...
Jazz P. replied:
Mikael Fehlberg & Bernhard Hamaker. Do you have examples? I use google docs without any visuals, as I could make it work for myself. Im a big fan of having google docs, 9 cards on a page, so you can always print your last changes and playtest them rather quick. Also quite handy when you work in an (online) development team.
Aerjen T. replied:
Well, since InDesign now also comes as a monthly subscription it actually is pretty affordable (depending on how long you need it for). Adobe Creative Cloud is free to try for thirty days and after that you plans start at 20 bucks per month. I'm not familiar with the VBA script, which seems awesome! Other than that if you're at the meetup on Tuesday, I'm happy to talk with you about the differences between the Adobe stuff and Gimp, Inkscape and Scribus. I've used both packages.
They kicked DJ Shadow off the decks last Friday night at Mansion in Miami. Can't believe anyone would pull the plug on a legend like that. Who's to blame? Shadow for not...