Every corner of nerd culture has its makers — the friend who codes a fan game in their spare time, the hobbyist who ships a quirky utility, the small team that turns a Discord in-joke into a real mobile game. Most of these projects live and die as passion work. But a growing number of indie creators are discovering that a finished app or game, even a small one, can be sold to someone who wants to keep it alive — and that the payout can be surprisingly real.
Passion projects have hidden resale value
The instinct among hobbyist developers is to treat a side project as a labour of love with no price tag. Yet the same qualities that make indie work charming — a loyal niche audience, a distinctive idea, steady little trickles of ad or purchase revenue — are exactly what buyers look for. A game with a few thousand devoted players and modest monthly income is not a failure; it is a functioning micro-business that someone else may happily pay to own.
That realisation is what draws creators to marketplaces built for this exact purpose. Simply scrolling through the apps for sale on a dedicated platform is an eye-opener, because it reveals what your kind of project might actually be worth. You can see puzzle games, utilities and casual titles listed with their real numbers — downloads, ratings, retention and monthly profit — and priced on a multiple of that income. For an indie maker, this transparency does two things: it sets realistic expectations, and it removes the intimidating parts of a sale by standardising how revenue is proven and how the app, its code and its store presence are handed to a new owner. What used to require knowing the right buyer now looks a lot more like listing an item and letting the market respond.
Why buyers want small, finished games
It might seem odd that anyone would buy a modest indie title, but the demand is logical. Building an audience from zero is the hardest, most expensive part of app development. A finished game that already has downloads, reviews and a working monetisation loop lets a buyer skip straight to the growth stage. The wider indie game movement has proven that small, original titles can find passionate audiences without a big studio behind them — and those audiences are precisely what makes a project attractive to acquire.
The economics are compelling for both sides. According to market trackers at Statista, mobile gaming continues to dominate app-store spending, and casual titles make up a huge share of that activity. A small game riding those trends can be a sensible purchase for a buyer looking to build a portfolio of income-producing apps.
What makes a project sellable
If you are sitting on a side project and wondering whether it could sell, a few things matter more than raw download counts:
• Working monetisation. Even small, steady revenue is far more sellable than a beautiful app that earns nothing.
• Clean handover. Organised source code and assets you actually have the rights to make a transfer painless.
• Honest metrics. Real screenshots of revenue and retention build the trust that closes deals.
• A distinctive hook. A clear reason players stick around — a mechanic, a theme, a community — raises the value.
Protect your rights before you sell
One area indie creators often overlook is licensing. Fan projects and hobby games sometimes borrow music, art or characters, and a buyer will rightly want assurance that everything transfers cleanly. Understanding basic intellectual property rules — and replacing anything you do not fully own before listing — protects both you and the person buying your work. It is the difference between a smooth sale and a deal that collapses under a legal question.
From hobby to habit
The creators who get the most out of this are the ones who stop seeing a completed project as the finish line. Sell one small game, reinvest the proceeds and the freed-up time, and build the next — a little smarter, a little more sellable. It is a side hustle that rewards exactly the skills nerds already have: making cool things, cultivating niche communities and sweating the details.
Your late-night passion project might be more than a portfolio piece. To the right buyer it is a living, breathing product with an audience attached — and turning that into real money is a very achievable kind of win.






