Dwight's games are better at launch, because he has no problem cutting and pasting. He grabs stuff that works, and flings together acceptable launch code. Actually, more than acceptable. A Dwight game will come out of the gate better than most. And it will get quick bug fixes... and then it will languish. It doesn't matter if the customers thinks it's done, it's done. Once the sales taper off, the game won't get that completion we like.
So, that is a strike against Dwight's games. But really, that is a strike against all games. When you buy them, you get what you get. Sometimes there is a surprise, but others, it remains the game you paid for. When I owned GOT, I knew that. The code was at an acceptable level for me. But that is also back when NIB games were around a thousand dollars lower priced.
I considered Munsters, but Dwight was one of the strikes against it. And I'm usually a Pro buyer anyway. So if it becomes great, I can just buy it later.