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Steam’s approval process dinged this indie game remake for being a remake of the game it’s remaking: ‘Seems identical to the game you put out 11 years ago’

Steam’s approval process dinged this indie game remake for being a remake of the game it’s remaking: ‘Seems identical to the game you put out 11 years ago’

InFlux Redux is an upcoming, beautified remake of a 2013 ball-rolling puzzle game from indie dev Joe Wintergreen, who’s had a hand in games like Weird West, Adios, and The Forgotten City. For Influx’s improved rebirth, Wintergreen rebuilt the game’s engine to implement improved physics alongside the graphical upgrades. Unfortunately, despite the substantial overhaul, he apparently caught Steam on a bad day when he submitted Influx Redux for build review.

For a game to appear on Steam, it has to pass a review process for both its store page and product build. Essentially, Steam has to verify that each game’s store listing will provide a “detailed and coherent” description of the product and that the software matches that description. It’s not surprising if a game fails its first build review; maybe there was an unexpected startup issue on Valve’s end, or it turned out that Steam achievements hadn’t been properly implemented. When Wintergreen saw that InFlux Redux failed its first review, however, he found some unexpected editorializing.



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