5/6/2023 0 Comments Dark deception steam![]() ![]() This whole thing has made me terribly terribly sad.- Dave Gilbert November 1, 2013Īt that point – and remember, Gilbert had been doing all of this for a freebie – he gave up and canceled the whole thing. Naturally, that brought the resellers back, who “easily masked their IPs and began chewing through the Steam codes again.” The removal of Steam keys led to “a large number of angry emails and tweets” from people outraged that they couldn’t get their free game on Steam, so Gilbert and BMT got together and set up a “one code per IP” system, returning Steam keys to the giveaway. ![]() BMT made the game live again, and I hoped that was the end of it.”Īlas, it was not. “This is something I didn’t anticipate happening, so I removed the Steam keys from the giveaway and placed the game on a few other websites to use as mirrors. And collecting Steam keys for reselling later,” Gilbert said. People were ordering multiple copies of the game – hundreds at a time. Gilbert eventually found an option in Steamworks that retroactively removes games from Steam keys, but a few hours later he learned that the offer was so popular it overloaded the servers at sales provider BMT. Wadjet Eye founder Dave Gilbert told Red Door Blue Key that things went off the rails very quickly when he discovered late Wednesday evening that the Steam keys being generated for the giveaway actually contained the company’s entire catalog of games. It turns out that, as is so often the case, no good deed goes unpunished. But the promotion ended early, leaving many who found out about it later in the day with no game and no explanation as to why. Wadjet Eye Games did a real solid for adventure fans on Halloween, making Blackwell Deception, the most recent game in the Blackwell series, free for everyone until midnight on November 1. The Blackwell Deception Halloween giveaway is a sad lesson in why we can’t have nice things.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |