Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
This makes me wonder how much money they could have made with this entire scam if they couldn't even sell their games to start with during greenlight. I guess if you're a rogue Russian developer then a few dollars on Steam can actually mean a lot due to exchange rates but aren't these brothers American?
Maybe they were unemployed and thought this was better than nothing instead of trying to pursue a career with an actual future. Maybe they actually thought they were doing good stuff. Both are likely judging from the :autism: we've seen from them.
Anyway I'd sure like to see some sales figures. I really hope their scam wasn't paying off but I may be too naive..
Robert sounds like your textbook narcissist and those deal very badly with money. The desperation that comes through in the mere act, not to mention the text of his lawsuit speaks to me of someone in very deep shit.
I appreciate his math but I don't think someone making this kind of money is likely to sue Steam users for mean comments- much less on the scale of millions of dollars
Whichever Romine Brother This is said:Wasn't Jim Sterling the only reason anyone even knew about Digital Homicide?
No, the marketing plans I created made a large following for Digital Homicide.
Whichever Romine Brother This is said:Was Digital Homicide an "Asset Flipper"?
Contrary to massive amounts of articles and videos on the topic, I never took a complete project and published it under Digital Homicide like it was "my" game. Thousands of hours of development went into the games.