ask from dev not us.so will this one be on steam too?
Yes, Casual Desires is also planned to be released on Steam later this year, likely a few months after Rebel Duet.so will this one be on steam too?
So, that happened with another game, so just to be sure, as soon as the game goes up on steam it means no more public versions will be officially released anymore, right?Yes, Casual Desires is also planned to be released on Steam later this year, likely a few months after Rebel Duet.
The process is a bit more complicated with Casual Desires since Valve is requesting a game build before the store page can go live. There's a number of changes that will need to be made for the Steam version, so I'm hoping to to work on this test build in-between development for Chapter 20.
up to dev. if steam says no then dev can always make "unofficial release" under other nick.So, that happened with another game, so just to be sure, as soon as the game goes up on steam it means no more public versions will be officially released anymore, right?
But that is a twinedged sword for the Dev, due to Steam regulations. If Steam gets wind of this happening, it can roast his/her Steam site. Granted, the chance of this is not overly high, but not zero. So most Devs with Steam sites do not give out public updates any longer.up to dev. if steam says no then dev can always make "unofficial release" under other nick.
From what SuperWriter said on it I'm pretty sure that rule depends on whether or not the game is labeled as early access or not. Can also just drop "private updates" to a "dedicated supporter" and let nature take its course.But that is a twinedged sword for the Dev, due to Steam regulations. If Steam gets wind of this happening, it can roast his/her Steam site. Granted, the chance of this is not overly high, but not zero. So most Devs with Steam sites do not give out public updates any longer.
As I mentioned before, you can underdive the Steam regulations and not be caught, but if you are then they might kick you out permanently. As for giving a version to a "dedicated updater" that is also possible, but not riskless. There is a reason most Devs once they have games on steam pull the plug on public versions.From what SuperWriter said on it I'm pretty sure that rule depends on whether or not the game is labeled as early access or not. Can also just drop "private updates" to a "dedicated supporter" and let nature take its course.
As for why that doesn't happen with that Wifey game I'm pretty sure it's more because 3Diddly hates this forum![]()
well if dev keeps game still at patreon and then some1 leaks or "leaks" it here then steam shouldn't have anything to say, even steam versions of some games get leaked here.But that is a twinedged sword for the Dev, due to Steam regulations. If Steam gets wind of this happening, it can roast his/her Steam site. Granted, the chance of this is not overly high, but not zero. So most Devs with Steam sites do not give out public updates any longer.
Rebel Duet is supposed to be released on Steam; it even has a page. If I were a betting man, I'd say the dev wants to complete that game for the additional revenue that he might earn from Steam. Casual Desires doesn't have one because it's far from over.ionDivvy: "don't worry, starting a second project will not slow down Casual Desires development, and here's why"
2022: 6 CD updates
2023: Rebel Duet starts, 3 CD updates
2024: 1 CD update? They are dangerously close to being a 6 month dev period, and then who knows. Why should the downward line stop there?
Really dislike devs like ionDivvy. you'd have to be so delusional to believe what they did that i think it has to count as dishonesty.
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don't quote bots.Link is directing to different site other than mega![]()