Classic MMO Astonia: The Return of Yendor Hits Steam


Yendor returns.

Continue reading “Classic MMO Astonia: The Return of Yendor Hits Steam”

Early Access: Day of Dragons’ Latest Store-Bought Asset Looks Terrible


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”

Beta Perspective: Ultimo Reino Is Absolutely A Game


And it made me learn Spanish. Continue reading “Beta Perspective: Ultimo Reino Is Absolutely A Game”

Destiny 2 Taken Offline (Again) Over Material-Deleting Bug


Don’t adjust that dial, folks. Destiny 2 has been taken offline once again due to a catastrophic bug deleting currencies and materials from player inventories. The bug surfaced a couple of weeks ago resulting in extended downtime and a rollback and it looks like exactly that same thing is happening once again.

Bungie’s customer service confirmed the re-emergence of the bug as the servers came down at 1:27p.m. EST for emergency maintenance.

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All player accounts will be rolled back to 11:30a.m. EST when the game comes back online later tonight, meaning players will only lose roughly two hours of progress assuming you played from the moment the servers came up to the moment they shut down.

We have identified the issue causing loss of materials and currencies after Hotfix 2.7.1.1. All player accounts will be rolled back to the state they were in at 8:30 AM PST, with maintenance expected to last until 7 PM PST.

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Steam Cleaned: Valve’s Latest Ban Wave Tastes Like Laundering


As has become a nearly weekly occurrence, Valve has instituted another ban wave of Steam games and once again it tastes like money laundering.

I’ve been talking about Steam games being used for money laundering for quite a while now, and it’s obvious that the problem isn’t going to be going away any time soon. Back in January I pointed out that there are a lot of games on Steam sitting at suspiciously expensive prices that appear to be asset flips or ports of mobile games. A week later, I reported that some of the titles had gotten the boot while others were still at large.

Still every so often Valve takes a hammer to some of these suspicious looking games. The image in the header is from the game Push Sticks, and it may surprise you to hear that this game was selling for $30. Well “selling” is a strong word because the game had activity for four days in mid-January and then fell off the charts again. But Push Sticks isn’t exactly an anomaly in my research, since many of the other titles we see get the banhammer fall into the same realm of activity. Ridiculous prices, no activity from the developer, and few if any actual play activity. Also oddly expensive specifically in China.

Someone noted that the first level in Push Sticks appears to be impossible to finish, and the game itself might be totally fake since all we see in promotional screenshots are the first level.

Figuring out how many copies of Push Sticks were bought is next to impossible, and it’s not like Valve is going to tell us. The next title on the chopping block was Wear A Rope which conveniently also launched on January 4, also cost $30, and also looks like baby’s first prototype game.

Am I saying that Push Sticks and Wear A Rope are from the same person/team? Yes. Or run through the same horrible translator. Let’s just look at the product description for Wear A Rope;

“You use a rope and a ring to play. It looks simple, but the operation is very difficult. See how long you can persist. A game that looks very simple, but the difficulty is very large, you can pass you Boring time.”

Compared to:

Push sticks – it’s a puzzle game

Introduction – this is a small game of pushing stakes. It seems to be very simple to you, but it is very difficult to play it

How to play – you just need to push the red stake to the exit to win, you don’t want to see it simple, in fact, it takes a lot of time to complete the research

Features – he will activate your brain. Make your brain smarter, and he can also kill your boring time

Kill your boring time indeed. Which brings us to the third and final game on the list; Co-Jump, Fly. A casual game about sorting trash. What.

“This is a casual game about garbage sorting, it is a platform jumping game, and it becomes more and more difficult over time. You need to sort different types of garbage. If you like the characters in this trash sorting game, please buy our DLC. We made very beautiful clothes for the characters. Of course, please contact us after purchasing our DLC. After providing the information, we will give you the exquisite real thing of this character for free. Thank you for supporting our game!”

Steam’s records show that Co-Jump Fly released on December 11, 2019 for $6.99 USD and had its price jacked up to $79.99 USD on January 13, 2020. What happened on January 13, you might be asking? Well…nothing. Valve removed the low confidence rating just a few days prior. The game has been steadily releasing incredibly expensive DLC; $63.79, $73.99, $53.99, and oddly enough $1.99 for “role” DLC that offers…something. It should be noted that these DLC were also on sale for ninety nine cents and were unanimously jacked up on February 10 to the prices above.

The DLC packs themselves are something quite different, being singular skins but with the added offer of a free physical model if you contact the developer.

“The DLC includes a new player skin, you can choose between the default skin and the new skin, and users who bought this DLC package can also get a beautiful physical model of this skin for free. Please contact us to accept the gift!”

I have never seen this on a Steam game. Co-Jump Fly’s developer name literally translates to “Debris Flow.” Going back to my money laundering theory, Co-Jump Fly may have gone a little overboard and flew too close to the sun. The title gained some attention from Steam users after popping up on the Top Selling list, with people wondering how the hell a game that expensive and with nobody playing managed to become a #5 top seller. Great question, I think you already know the answer.

With Valve’s laissez faire policy on the Steam store, there is no doubt in my mind we’ll be seeing many more of these bans in the coming weeks and months.

Not Massive: ResetEra User Review Bombs AI: The Somnium Files


I have referred to ResetEra over the years as an asylum, a toxic cesspool, and a grease trap echo chamber where hatred goes to fester. Needless to say I don’t have the most positive opinion on the forum.

Our article today comes from Kotaro Uchikoshi Eng, who you may recognize as director on the the Zero Escape series. Our subject reached out on Twitter and to ResetEra for help yesterday regarding the game AI: The Somnium Files. AI had been review bombed on Metacritic from an 8.2 user score to a 1.9 in one day and digging up the how’s and why’s was something of a priority. Speculation had been running rampant on ResetEra and Reddit over the size and scope of the review bombing, its goal, and motivation. At one point users suggested that the review bombing may be in response to a scene where the character Mizuki refers to the LGBT community as one that is “more sensitive and capable of sympathy” due to their shared struggles. Not entirely surprising.

User Krvavi Abadas on ResetEra posted in the same thread a detailed report on the review bombing and its motivations. A little too detailed if you ask some, and it didn’t take long before the truth came out. Krvavi Abadas hadn’t just investigated the review bomb, they were responsible for it. And why? Over a crush on a fictional character. Turns out the criminal does return to the scene of the crime.

Abadas buckled like a dollar store stepladder.

“But Akira Okada ended up discovering that i had tanked the score for AI hours after i did it, and the whole story basically blew up from there.
To reiterate my thoughts on the game from previous threads. I loved most of the A-set videos and found them to be incredibly endearing, even developing a massive crush on her due to my general attachment issues. But i hated the actual game for how it basically ignores everything said videos were trying to build up, to the point that it”

For what it’s worth, Abadas has been permanently banned on ResetEra for “engaging in inappropriate behavior.” It didn’t stop them from defending their actions on Twitter.

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Abadas’ actions do highlight the reality that MetaCritic is just about worthless when it comes to user reviews due to how easy it is for one person to tank a game’s score. Hopefully Metacritic will see this as a learning experience but given the website’s past we highly doubt it.

EGS: Kingdom Come: Deliverance Free Next Week


This week’s list of free Epic Game Store titles includes Carcassonne and Ticket To Ride, but gamers might be looking more forward to next week’s offering.

Starting February 13 and running through the 20, you’ll be able to get your hands on Kingdom Come: Deliverance at no cost. Kingdom Come launched in early 2018 from Warhorse Studios and publisher Deep Silver. A story-driven RPG that features an open world, challenging combat, and an authentic feeling medieval Bohemia. Kingdom Come currently holds a mostly positive rating on Steam where user reviews are allowed.

Also available alongside Kingdom Come will be Aztez. Aztez bills itself as a hybrid beat-em-up and turn-based strategy game. It originally launched in 2017 by Team Colorblind.

Source: Epic Game Store

MapleStory 2 To Sunset 32 Bit Client This Month


Sorry folks.

As the tech industry continues moving forward into the far flung future of 2020, you folks on last decade’s hardware are inevitably going to be left in the dust. Unfortunately for MapleStory 2 players that means anyone running on 32-bit is going to have a heaping helping of nothing come next week.

Nexon today announced that the 32 bit client for MapleStory 2 is going away, as in going away on February 12.

“Starting on February 12th, 2020, the 32-bit client for MapleStory 2 will be discontinued. Players will be defaulted to the 64-bit version of the game client. Moreover, the recommended specs of MapleStory 2 will be adjusted on all of our platforms. Due to Microsoft’s discontinuation of Windows 7 support, we recommend that players use Windows 10 when playing the game.”

The announcement can be found here.

Steam Cleaned: Undead Vs. Plants Is Terrifying


Undead Vs. Plants might be the most horrifying game I’ve seen on Steam, and as of this week you can’t buy it anymore as the developer has pulled it from sale. On a functional level it’s a ricochet game and might provide for a challenging puzzle game. On the other hand the characters in this game look like the last things I will see when I die and am dragged to hell by the demons of my past.

You play as zombie Arnold using your bullet ricochet powers to kill plants. The plants in the game are just the right combination of detail and awful to fall into the category where their very visage is discomforting. Haunting my dreams for eternity.

The developer Peaksel D.O.O. Nis has a math game still on Steam titled Zeus vs Monsters which is a math game for children and features art that while not great won’t give those children a nightmare just for wanting to learn addition and subtraction. Peaksel has a lot of creepy games on its website, including one about a pregnant talking cat named Emma. If you really want to play Undead vs. Plants you can do so on Android or Google Play. The game is still free there.

Mobility: Com2uS Announces Summoners War: Chronicles


Summoners War is getting a prequel!

Summoners War: Chronicles was announced this week by Com2uS. Chronicles is set 70 years before the original Summoners War, a real time battle game that has gained a fair amount of attention thanks to the strong IP it is based on. Players choose up to three characters to take into battle from a growing roster of characters.

Summoners War: Chronicles will bring a different gameplay experience and fun to many global users who enjoy MMORPGs,” said Jack Lee, the head of division at Com2uS. “We are working hard to provide high game quality and meet the expectations of many game fans around the world.”

Com2uS aims to launch Summoners War: Chronicles in the second half of 2020. Stay tuned for more information.