PC Gamer

The hack-and-slash MMO Guardians of Ember, which was delisted from Steam more than a year ago for review score shenanigans, is now back in action (but not on Steam) in open beta.   

Guardians of Ember is now under the control of publisher Gameforge, which acquired the game from Insel following its delisting last year. Numerous updates to gameplay, missions, and character customization options have been made since then, and localization and language support have also been expanded. Players can choose from four races and six unique classes, and will face "brutal" combat in more than 60 randomized dungeons spread across 58 regions. 

"We saw a considerable number of players joining Guardians of Ember from several countries when we announced the new local servers, and so we have put a lot of effort in making the game available in their native languages so that they can enjoy the same immersive experience as other players do in their own language,” Gameforge CEO Alexander Rösner said. 

"Guardians of Ember has been available in English, Spanish, and German throughout the Closed Beta. Starting today, the game will also be available in French, Italian, Turkish, and Polish." 

Players who registered for Guardians of Ember's closed beta phases will be granted an exclusive in-game title, while the Veterans Reward program will award "many valuable items" to those who purchased the game in its original form. More information about Guardians of Ember, and a signup link if you'd like to try the open beta, are up at gameforge.com

Guardians of Ember was delisted from Steam in early 2018 when employees of Insel Games were effectively ordered by the company CEO to purchase the game and then post positive reviews.

PC Gamer

The MMO hack-and-slasher Guardians of Ember was removed from Steam in February 2018 after Valve determined that publisher Insel Games had been manipulating review scores—specifically by compelling its employees to purchase the game and write positive reviews for it. (Or explain to the studio CEO why they don't want to.)   

But it's coming back: Gameforge recently announced that it acquired the publishing rights to Guardians of Ember from Insel last year and plans to launch it as a free-to-play game. The updated game will feature improvements to gameplay, mission design, character customization, and the interface, with "expanded regional localization support across North and South America, Europe, and select Asian territories." 

Closed beta signups are open now at gameforge.com, and everyone who had the previous version of the game will be granted access automatically. It's not clear whether Guardians of Ember will actually return to Steam: There's no new listing for it and the closed beta client is a standalone download, but the Steam Database shows quite a bit of activity on the account since December 2018. A full release date hasn't been set. 

PC Gamer

Following the circulation of an email that appeared to exhort Insel Games employees to purchase copies of its hack-and-slash MMO Wild Buster: Heroes of Titan and review it positively—or else—Valve has announced that all of the publisher's games have been removed from Steam.   

The email, sent in mid-December (reportedly by the studio CEO) and posted to Reddit yesterday, pointed out that Wild Buster only had six user reviews on Steam at the time, far fewer than the number of people who work at the studio. Furthermore, some employees had apparently indicated that they weren't actually interested in purchasing or reviewing the game at all. 

"Frankly, this leaves me pretty disappointed," it states. "Of course I cannot force you to write a review (let alone tell you what to write)—but I should not have to. Neglecting the importance of reviews will ultimately cost jobs. If WB fails, Insel fails, IME fails and then we will all have no job next year." 

"So I am asking you either [to] do the following: Buy the game and present me with the receipt until Friday night for which (together with a claim form) you will be reimbursed within 24h or explain to me tomorrow why you do not wish to do this. I would like to discuss this individually and privately with each of you and follow up." 

The Reddit post quickly came to the attention of Valve, which launched an investigation into the claims and found "unacceptable behavior involving multiple Steam accounts controlled by the publisher of this game." 

"The publisher appears to have used multiple Steam accounts to post positive reviews for their own games. This is a clear violation of our review policy and something we take very seriously," a Valve rep wrote. "For these reasons, we are ending our business relationship with Insel Games Ltd. and removing their games from our store." 

Insel Games confirmed in an email that the December message posted to Reddit was in fact sent to employees, which it said number about 20 in total, but denied that there were any ulterior motives at play. "It was meant to rally people’s support, including advertising the game to their family and friends, in the hope to simply get more reviews," the company said.

"It was never intended to threaten anyone but just state the importance of reviews for the whole company. No staff has received penalties for not buying the game or writing a review. There also never were texts or instructions provided for reviews. We sincerely apologize for the misleading wording in the email and the practice in general."

People who own any of Insel's games on Steam will still have full access to them, and Insel said it's in discussions with Valve, presumably with the aim of having its games restored. It also said that it will continue to develop its games and maintain their availability "through other channels," although obviously losing access to Steam is going to hurt

It could also lead to further confusion and headaches for Insel and gamers alike: Wild Buster and Guardians of Ember remain available for purchase on the Humble Store, for instance, but whether the provided Steam keys will continue to work isn't known. I've emailed Humble for clarification.

PC Gamer

Guardians of Ember is a fantasy hack-and-slash MMO released in September that bears more than a passing resemblance to traditional action-RPGs like Diablo 2 and Grim Dawn. Steam user reviews have been mixed, although post-release updates appear to have improved that pictures somewhat, but what's important right now is that it's free to play this weekend, so you can find out for yourself what it's all about without spending a dime. 

"Through the whole weekend players can try out each of the six different classes, create unique builds with more than 300 skills and a dual class system at their disposal," publisher Insel Games said. "Fans of traditional MMOs will enjoy features like housing, crafting, fishing and can use the Group Finder to make new friends. More action awaits the brave heroes of Olyndale as they slash their way through hordes of enemies, level up, and tackle randomized and instanced dungeons in the new nightmare mode together with their allies or alone." 

The trial period will include special events designed for the free weekend, which will take place alongside the usual public events, and all progress earned during the freebie will carry over the full game. If you're inclined to spring for it, this would be a good time, because the deluxe and ultimate editions are also on for half price until November 6: $15/£13/€15 for the deluxe, which includes one DLC release, and $30/£25/€29 for the ultimate, which has two.   

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