Not to mention that Glass has been around for a much smaller amount of time. RTB was already known and established before the release of retail and had many years of widespread support. The community used to be much more centralized and the forums were much more active, which has drifted since the Steam release and fall of RTB. Many users were only drawn to it for IRC and later chat. So honestly, the adoption we have now is actually something to be very proud of.
Please, in the future take your snide remarks elsewhere. I'd love constructive criticism, I really do want to deliver a good product. I understand that GUI design isn't my forte, and I'd love for someone who's better at this to join the team, but until then, I don't think it looks half bad. I understand that Glass faces a lot of bugs, but I also pump out content at a rate much much faster than RTB did and I receive little to no feedback on the betas that I release. As much as I'd love bugs to be reported during my betas, they aren't. I really don't actively play Blockland, so it's difficult for me to catch a lot of niche bugs on my own, but I've been part of this community since I was 10, so I'd really like to see this game prosper and move on. Preferences and Updates aren't as stable as I'd like them to be, but I'm trying to take a responsible approach by using community made standards instead of the black-curtain development practices of RTB. And the system works other than relatively small bugs. I take user suggestion and request very seriously and I believe I have a very interactive development process. I'm trying to develop a service that can live on even if I cease to develop it.
This is just more of a general message. I've seen various snide remarks or offhanded insults around the forums, and I'd just rather those come straight to me in the form of suggestion or bug reports as opposed to vague attacks that discourage the entire project. I understand the condescending nature of BLF, but still, filling the void left by RTB is inevitably helping the community, so why not be constructive instead of an asshat?