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Warner Bros. Discovery has spent at least two months threatening more than a dozen indie game developers with “retiring” their games, with little to no reaction as to why they couldn’t do anything and much more for the gamers and creators of the games.
Late last week, one of the creators of swimming games for adults affected by the obvious closure of Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) posted on X (formerly Twitter) that it had received an email from Warner Bros. indicating that your duck game is ‘safe. ‘” [T]he game will be shipped back to Corptron with [its] store pages across all platforms,” Landon wrote. The same goes for Owen Deery, whose WBD review of his game Small Radios Big Televisions turned heads. to the media conglomerate’s inventory and announced that its game would also regain ownership and store listings.
As PC Gamer pointed out, the 60-day era first given to developers to have their games delisted, and yet most of Adult Swim Games’ titles are still online.
The developers may have put their games back on the list, but all reviews, discussions, screenshots, achievements, and other related media would have been lost.
Ars has requested comment from WBD and will update with any responses.
WBD’s decision to “scoff” at game show titles came after the relative cessation of once-promising adult swimming games and the Warner Bros. /Discovery merger that led to the cancellation and marginalization of the media, in order to claim a fiscal entry. Desactivaciones. La combined company shut down the game and anime studio Rooster Teeth, archived videos such as Batgirl and Coyote vs. Acme, and got rid of many of the most beloved titles from its streaming service, now known as Max.
Listing symbol via Megadev/Adult Swim Games
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