2 min read

We ran a jam on our own logo and the feed exploded

The Remix Game Jam: $5K, 152 submissions, and 2.7M plays on games built around a mystery logo drop.

We ran a jam on our own logo and the feed exploded

We ran Remix Game Jam on Remix. $5K on the line, a themed feed at remix.gg/z/remix, and a deadline that forced creators to ship.

152 games from 63 creators, 2.8M plays across the jam catalog, and a feed that looked nothing like a roadmap doc.

I know that sounds like a stunt. It isn't. Jams are the single best content engine we have, and I'll defend that against any roadmap.

Why a theme beats a plan

Give a creator a blank page and they freeze. Give them the Remix logo and a deadline and they ship by lunch. The theme did half the design work. Everyone already knows the vibe, so creative energy goes straight into the loop instead of the lore.

What showed up in the feed

Physics puzzlers and arcade skill games rose fastest. Classic Ball and Perfect Balance alone crossed a million plays combined.

If you want a sense of the ceiling, look at Classic Ball by makewalletgreat (629K plays), or Perfect Balance by verror09 (501K plays). That bar is reachable in a weekend now.

The real point

We could have spent that window building features we think you want. Instead we gave you a theme and watched the feed fill with games we'd never have dreamed up in a planning doc. The crowd out-creates the roadmap every single time.

On a traditional engine, a themed jam means weeks of setup before anyone makes anything. On Remix you read the theme over coffee and ship before the day's out. When the gap between idea and playable is that short, you don't get a handful of polished entries. You get a flood, and the best ones rise in the feed on their own.

Thanks to everyone who built. The next theme is already closer than you think.

Open the feed and start your own run.