For years we rehearsed the same myth: the indie developer as a romantic insurgent, a lone figure coding by the light of a flickering monitor while the industry’s empires loom overhead. It was a useful story. It is no longer an accurate one. Indie today is not resistance. It is the design of dense systems under asymmetric constraints, a continuous negotiation between time and ambition, tools and identity, AI and craft.
The garage was never the point. The architecture is. What we actually build are interlocking structures with insufficient resources and excessive intent. Pipelines that must behave, economies that must not collapse, narrative layers that must cohere, performance budgets that must not betray us. The scale is not small. The scale is compressed.
AI does not make this easier. It makes it stranger. It turns the solo developer into a fragmented micro-studio, capable of generating almost anything and therefore forced to decide what truly matters. When everything can be simulated, authorship migrates to refusal. The real creative act is choosing what not to build.
I wrote a long-form reflection on this anti-mythology of indie development here:
https://wardrome.com/the-anti-mythology-of-indie-why-making-an-indie-game-today-is-not-resisting-but-engineering-complex-systems-with-asymmetric-resources/If you’re building something in this asymmetry, I’d be genuinely curious how you navigate it.
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