My experience with Kongregate was different, but I did feel some of the same things. We became a vehicle for many indie game creators to make a living, which I'm very proud of. In our case we also had a sale that was very profitable for the founders and early employees, and also profitable for our investors.
But the weird thing is that if our VC investors had known at the outset that they would have a 3x return on their money in three years, they probably wouldn't have made the investment. A 50% annual rate of return is not worth their time. That's not what their LPs are looking for.
The angels made more like 6.5x and put in less time - most of them would take that deal all day long. I'm an angel now, and I definitely would. So perhaps startups that need capital but aren't looking to be billion dollar companies should consider just raising a seed round from angels... The difficulty there is that angels do want an exit, not dividends from a profitable company that stays private forever.
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