Yikes. "I'm not sure what the issue is exactly." No offense, but is he serious?
That Steam renig I mentioned a few posts up ... it specifically mentioned that bans and suspensions were done on a case-by-case basis under human review from start to finish. That was causing problems and misunderstandings about what their guidelines were. It's implied that the people they hired to do that stuff were ... taking liberties. Which was obvious. Point being, I guarantee Patreon is the same. Patreon's guidelines are more over-reaching so more content falls under that umbrella, regardless of how hazy the connection is. All you need is a hardcore christian or feminist reviewing your case to find some sort of connection. And you're fucked.The problem with figuring out what the people behind the curtain at Patreon want is that sometimes these are "blanket" suspensions. They hit a bunch of accounts at once and then take time to actually contact each account to let them know what triggered the suspension (if valid at all).
So, it's as much the delay as the uncertainty that creates the trouble "fixing" the issue.
Developers can't control what other people doI wonder, is Patreon now going after devs for allowing the de-censoring patches on Lewdpatcher? I hope not.
Are you 100% sure of that?Patreon only polices what is available on their platform.
Or even just an over-eager cubicle cubicle monkey who thinks their boss will like their extra "efforts." I can imagine lots of scenarios where the personal prejudices of the reviewer are totally irrelevant--their goal is to simply climb the corporate ladder, and they think "being tough" is a way to get a good review from their manager.All you need is a hardcore christian or feminist reviewing your case to find some sort of connection. And you're fucked.
Like jealous competitors or outright trolls who enjoy ruining the joys of other people.Sometimes, it's not even that. I been enlightened to the fact that there are just malicious jerks out there who, for "fun", like to screw with developers by reporting their pages.
I suspect so. I got a message from another artist I support saying he was suspended, only an hour and a few minutes after Perverteer's.The problem with figuring out what the people behind the curtain at Patreon want is that sometimes these are "blanket" suspensions.
When all this happened last year, people suspected that it was Patreon's partnership with Paypal that 'required' Patreon to change its standards. But, I just don't buy that. Why sacrifice that much money just to support Paypal when VISA, Mastercard, Discover, AMEX, and crypto all support direct transactions with no strings attached (I believe Amazon checkout does, as well). The consumer really doesn't give a shit over such a minor convenience. I only use Paypal to send money to relatives. It's pretty obvious Patreon is just a bunch of moral zealots.there are competitors for patreon but those aren't that well known besides kickstarter (dunno what's their policy for adult games).
While not a good reason to ban games, a fair bet is that Patreon's recent attitude change might be because of the recently-passed SESTA law that makes it illegal to abet sex trafficking. That would explain their camming bans and the general timing of the crackdown.There may be some legal reason. Such as a binding contract between Patreon and Paypal that Patreon's lawyers didn't bother reading. Like, it didn't allow adult content and that required them to change their policies because the penalty for breaking the contract was worse. But we'll never know.