I wish these guys would be honest...
They heard about Notch making millions through indi development, and want some for themselves.
The problem with that, is these guys aren't necesserily cut out for indi development, at least in regard to the true roots of it. Notch made Minecraft, and to do that, you have to be fairly dedicated, but also multi-talented. He would have done the textures as he coded, added features that came to him while having a dump, he would have spent sleepless nights going through ideas. Professional developers can't all do that. Would you let Peter Molyneux do his own graphics... would you trust him to write your engine, considering it's probably been 20 years since he touched any code. There is a big difference between a homegrown, self-taught indi, and a professional who's decided indi is the way forward.
Frankly, I think they should leave indi's alone, and start small studios instead - not with 50 people, not 25, but with 5 or 6 people, something sustainable. How many artists do you need, how many musicians, how many coders - at the end of the day, indi's are used to having to do everything themselves, professional designers and developers are used to filling in a form when they need something - old school, homegrown, self taught indi's like Notch are built to last, these newly indipendant developers should stop expecting the world to fall at their feet. The industry was built by hobbyists, bedroom coders, and shareware coders, some of them are even going strong today, Jeff Minter for example - covered in Yak spit and smelling like a sweaty digestive biscuit... Gotta love old Jeff, he's an inspiration to all programmers.
Also, they need to stop going indi, then DEPENDING on things like Kickstarter, that's not indipendance, that's unilateral dependance on the fan base you might possibly have in future. These guys have to earn the fan base based on their next game, that they have to make without guaranteed funding or support, no pressure!
Frankly, anyone who wants to be an indipendant developer can, you don't have to work well with a team, have project management skills, hell - all you need is a PC and a desire to learn, no previous education required at all.