How did Move People top the charts with Supersonic?

Paul Raubic, the founder of Pau Rau Studio, tells the story of how he achieved success with Supersonic with the game Move People.
move people supersonic
How did Move People succeed with Supersonic?

Move People is the brainchild of Paul Raubic, solo developer and founder of Pau Rau Studio. He previously self-published a successful title, Sausage Toss, that achieved over 100K installs, but Move People is his first game launch with a publisher, and it’s scaling incredibly well.

Working closely with Supersonic and maintaining a constant back-and-forth with the team, Paul grew the game into a profitable hit that reached the top 3 on both iOS and Android – and remained in the top charts even several weeks after. Here, Paul discusses his journey into hyper-casual game development and his experience collaborating with the Supersonic team to build Move People into the success it is today.

Pau Rau Studio and Supersonic
Stages of Pau Rau Studio’s introduction to Supersonic.

Switching the focus to designing marketable games

Even though he still holds a full-time job as a software developer, game development is his true passion. He has been developing games since middle school, starting with Flash games then eventually moving to Unity.

He started getting into hyper-casual game development about 5 years ago because as an indie developer, getting attention for a game is difficult. However, hyper-casual games are highly marketable and can attract users more easily – even if you don’t have a recognizable brand name or reputation behind you.

Giving a trend a new face

While tracking the games in the top hyper-casual charts, Paul saw there was a trend for maneuvering characters’ limbs into certain positions – they seemed to be a new type of puzzle game. He had the idea to apply this trend to a face morph game in which players match a certain expression by controlling the character’s facial features. Expanding on this, he thought that players could maneuver the full body instead of just the face, which created more options for gameplay since there are a limited number of facial expressions and emotions users can make without feeling repetitive.

From self-serve testing to a Supersonic partner

Paul has tested previous prototypes with Supersonic after another developer friend of his introduced him to Supersonic’s self-serve testing platform. The platform was incredibly easy to use, and the Supersonic team always reached out after a test with their feedback, which is extremely rare compared to his previous experiences with other publishers. From the get-go, it was clear that Supersonic is willing to be transparent and provide assistance even at the initial prototyping phase. After Paul tested an early Move People prototype, they suggested he change the creative and provided recommendations on – this brought CPI to $0.35-$0.40 and was enough to start building out the game while continuing to work on lowering CPI.

With the Supersonic team, Paul began building out levels, making game tweaks, and testing new creatives. We A/B tested many elements of the game, like:

  • With each level, creating a progression bar to indicate how close the user is to solving the problem
  • Adding a circle to each body part to indicate how close the user was to the target
  • Changing the level order so easier levels occurred first

Just two weeks later, they had built out 40 levels and achieved the following metrics:

  • CPI = $0.30
  • Playtime = 1800s
  • Retention = 37% – 40%

Moving onto soft launch, they began A/B testing monetization, like bonus levels and interstitial timing. From game tweaks to monetization, as they tested the new feature against current gameplay, 95% of these A/B tests showed that the new feature was more successful than the control group. Supersonic constantly saw ways to optimize and improve gameplay, and players accepted and enjoyed the new elements.

move people
Metrics that the game reached in 2 weeks

Still improving after launch

Paul continued to work very closely with Supersonic even after launch – in fact, the team had the idea to introduce a storyline to the game. In the narrative, users follow the love story of a young couple and play through different scenes of their relationship, sometimes completing multiple scenes within a single level. The storyline made gameplay feel more dynamic and created greater monetization opportunities. Players win gems as they play through the narrative, then watch rewarded videos to use those gems and unlock prizes. Of all ad placements within the game, these rewarded videos performed best – they had an over 2.5x higher usage rate.

On the creative side, too, Paul worked closely with the Supersonic team to understand what was performing well and what needed improvement. Every new level that he built, he sent a creative to the team and they iterated on it together. Such close collaboration has helped grow Move People into the hit it is today and scale profit significantly.

The best publisher in the world

“I truly believe Supersonic is the best publisher in the world – they believed in my concept and went above and beyond to grow my game.”

Paul Raubic, Founder of Pau Rau Studio

The entire Supersonic team gave Paul the resources and support he needed to succeed as a solo developer. He truly believes Supersonic is the best publisher in the world – they believed in his concept even when CPI was just so-so and went above and beyond to grow his game. Along the way, Paul has learned a lot, which is in large part due to their transparency and cooperation. They’ve helped him grow as a developer and set him up for success now and into the future. The Supersonic team has created magic with Move People, and Paul knows they have more success stories on the way together.

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