Side-note about Rami since Reddit and game journo rags did their best to make sure this didn't get traction and I wasn't here when it happened: Last year Rami got a bunch of developers to make games for his "art project". Essentially it was a game launcher that would only feature one game a day. If you missed a day, there was no way to go back and play that game. Neat idea in concept - all the games were small and beatable in one sitting.
In true indie game developer fashion, Rami fucked up the launch by 1) Not running the .exe through a virus scanner to check for false-positives, and 2) Decided that the developers wouldn't be credited until a YEAR later. On launch day people weren't able to run the launcher since Win10 automatically nuked the executable for (supposedly) having a key logger. On the other side of things, people who had contributed games to the project were panic-tweeting Rami that the site all the news outlets were linking to didn't have a credits page. Turns out, Rami hadn't told all the developers that they wouldn't be receiving credit until the project wrapped in 2020, so the initial rush of traffic would have zero impact on contributors. He said (paraphrasing) that including credits ruined his "vision" of the project - the only credit given on the site was his own game studio. As a result, the Twitter hashtag filled up with developers leaking their games ahead of time to try and get some kind of recognition off of it while Rami maintained that these people were simply "misinformed" about the nature of the project. The launcher being fucked for the first few days also meant some games were never playable given the "only one game a day" gimmick. Similar things happened over the course of the year, as some games would not download or launch correctly.
Of course, after all was said and done, the credits were finally released to a fraction of the audience that was there at the start. No hope for the people who thought this might be a good way to get their foot in the door - just Rami bragging about how well his project had gone despite a few bumps in the road.