To see how you can help, read on.
Continue reading “The Isle Raises Money For Lead Programmer With Brain Tumor”
To see how you can help, read on.
Continue reading “The Isle Raises Money For Lead Programmer With Brain Tumor”
Massive spoilers ahoy. Continue reading “The Division 2: The Story So Far”
Couldn’t look more out of place it if was cel-shaded. Continue reading “Early Access: Day of Dragons’ Latest Store-Bought Asset Looks Terrible”
Last Evil is a well liked and popular new Steam game, and you can’t buy it. Continue reading “NM: Last Evil Abandoned By Dev One Week After Launch”
And it made me learn Spanish. Continue reading “Beta Perspective: Ultimo Reino Is Absolutely A Game”
WHY DID YOU CHANGE THE WEBSITE IT WAS PERFECT! Continue reading “Meta News: MMO Fallout Has Jumped The Shark!”
Valve has taken an axe to a fair number of Steam games this week, but for this edition of Steam Cleaned I’m going to focus on Berarts Ltd. who appears to have been banned for rigging Steam reviews. I can’t confirm this 100% because they haven’t made a comment nor is Valve going to say anything publicly, but after viewing the company’s itinerary of games there are some discrepancies that must be noted.
First let’s point out their six titles:
Particularly that Berarts games have a lot of repeat reviewers. Take Lowell here who owns two unbanned games yet managed six product reviews.

Going through the review list by hand, I managed to find a ton of accounts that look a lot like Lowell; Accounts private so I can’t see their reviews on one page, own less unbanned games than they have reviews for (and have not reviewed), and just happened to review the entire library of Berarts games or most of them.
I won’t bore you by going over every name on the list but there are a lot of accounts reviewing Berarts Games that meet the criteria above, way too many to be a coincidence. Evidently Valve saw the same because Berarts is no longer welcome on the Steam platform along with several other developers. But more on them later.

Today’s Steam Cleaned topic is One Wish, the latest game to be targeted by card farming bots because Steam allows this sort of thing.
One Wish is by all means a completely forgettable title owing to the simple fact that it came and went without a whole lot of fanfare. The game launched back in June 2018 and probably performed just fine for a low budget game. One Wish also has trading cards, and appears to have been the subject of a mass botting campaign that took place this week.
Despite the fact that One Wish has had two forum threads and less reviews than would fill up a Battlefield server, the game experienced a 24 hour peak of over eight thousand players. Keep in mind this is a game that previously had long periods where nobody was playing at all. Eight thousand concurrent players yet nobody is discussing it in the forums and nobody is leaving reviews. It’s almost as if those accounts don’t have a real person at the helm. Almost.
And 24 hours later, the swarm is gone. Like an antelope devoured by a swarm of piranha, One Wish is back to having 0 concurrent logins.

I wanted to see if One Wish was by its lonesome, so I did a quick look at the other titles listed by developer GD Nomad, and wouldn’t you know it? I found more. GD Nomad also developed My Bones which experienced a similar but nowhere near as large spike in users over the past couple of days. My Bones has a “mostly negative” 25% positive rating on Steam, not exactly the kind of game to jump up 2,500 players for no reason. It averages one or two reviews per month, if even that. It does have trading cards.

Wooden House has trading cards, and wouldn’t you know it. My Bones hasn’t had a single post on its forums in nearly two years and one review since October.

GD Nomad’s library is chock full of games that have sudden inexplicable leaps in popularity only for that popularity to immediately die the following day.
Now none of this is meant to imply misconduct on the developer/publisher’s part, nor is it conclusive evidence that the games are being farmed for cards (although it’s pretty clear). The games could have been swept up by bot farms given that they are 1.) cheap and 2.) have trading cards. That’s all you need. These games are literally a dime in some currencies, and it’s also possible that some keys got dumped off on one of those grey market Russian websites that like to buy these games in bulk from the dev to use in bot farms. Not a bad return for games that most people seemed to hate.
More Steam reports as they appear.