Bradon Cobb, president of SFT, will have you believe that he is the retro-gaming Jesus. He does think very highly of himself, touting his "natural abilities" in interviews and the such.
yeah, I think its all pompous BS, to be honest.
There are MSX cartridge publishers overseas that have published alot of games. I've purchased them, and can attest to the professional quality of the games.
http://www.msxcartridgeshop.com/http://www.matranet.net/And then theres the NES stuff...Battlekid is legit, as are all the other carts
http://www.retrousb.com/index.php?cPath=30And FFS, even self published C64 releases like Knight n' Grail, which was probably the most extremely well put together homebrew, ever. Thats alot coming from me considering I can't stand the C64.
also, some jackass self published this shitty game called Insanity last year.
I get a kick out of BC's bi-annual visits to retrogaming forums to promote his latest publication.... and then he vanishes into the night, missing out on all the retrogaming talking goodness.
Yeah, SFT has put out some good games, but flailing about acting like you're the only one who can do it when you clearly aren't, is well,... dumb.
Also, I think the clamshell cases they use for the Genesis games blow dick, but whatever. I swapped out some crappy Genesis games I got for 1$. Yay for real quality cases that don't shatter if you close them wrong.
Publishing games is retard-simple. Especially since the target audience in retrogameland is PRETTY MINIMAL, and especially if we're talking CD games. Shit, for CD games, you fill out an order form on a site, mail them a master disc and some artwork and wait for a truck to drop a box of jewel cases off on your front porch. Then you shove them in envelopes and mail them to people.
Publishing cart games is almost as simple. You buy bulk boards, and carts, and manually assemble them all. It's grunt work, but it's still not like its some cryptic riddle. If you're the programmer of the game, I would sure hope you can handle burning and installing roms on boards. If not, lets be honest, theres someone who will gladly help.
It's no different than when you've got retro computer clubs assembling NIC's, or other cartridges and mailing them out to people... only instead of being a communication device, or storage cart, its got a game rom in it! I think the hardest part is putting the frigging sticker on the cartridge neatly.