Greenlight retirado finalmente de Steam

R

Greenlight is being retired. For more information on how to submit games to steam, refer to this blog post.

Post explicativo:

Closing Greenlight Today, Steam Direct Launches June 13
6 DE JUNIO - ALDEN
In this post, we're going to talk about closing down Steam Greenlight and the transition to Steam Direct.

If you haven't already, it's worth reading the last few posts we've made recently about our philosophy, some changes to address bad actors, and some upcoming improvements to Steam Curators system. These posts introduce and describe the subtle, but important, shift in the way the Steam Store is designed, and who it is designed for.

A look back at Greenlight
Steam Greenlight launched on August 30, 2012, at a time when we realized that we weren't able to predict which titles players were really interested in. Up until that point, a small team here at Valve had been hand-picking games to invite on to the Steam platform, and almost every day we would hear from players wondering why awesome new game X wasn't available on Steam. The more this happened, the less confident we became that our own tastes were accurately representing the tastes of everyone using Steam. Greenlight was introduced as a way to help our team figure out which games players most wanted, by having those Steam users vote. Almost right away, we saw an incredible variety of games being submitted and voted on, which made it clear to us that there are far more distinct tastes and interests among Steam players than we had realized.

Right from the early days and throughout the life of Greenlight, we have been continually surprised by the hits coming through. In just the first year we saw titles such as War For The Overworld, Evoland, Rogue Legacy, and Verdun move through Greenlight and go on to become hugely successful. We found it was easy to explain afterwards why some titles turned out to be big hits, but when we forced ourselves to predict beforehand, we weren't nearly as accurate as we thought we were going to be. Those early years also saw huge growth in some categories of games that we had previously considered extremely niche, like visual novels. Whether you love or hate visual novels (In which case you can customize your preferences here!), they have gone on to form a huge following on Steam. Even today, we still see surprising smash hits come through Greenlight, such as the recent releases of Dead Cells and Blackwake.

Now, five years since Greenlight started, we've seen over 90 Million votes cast on submissions in Greenlight. Nearly 10 Million players have participated in voting in Steam Greenlight, but over 63 million gamers have played a game that came to Steam via Greenlight. These players have logged a combined 3.5 Billion hours of game time in Greenlight titles. Some of those titles, like The Forest, 7 Days to Die, and Stardew Valley, are in the list of top 100 selling games ever released on Steam.

With these kinds of successes, the thousands of niche titles, and everything in between, we realized that a direct and predictable submission process will best serve the diverse interests of players moving forward. So thanks to all of you who voted and played games in Greenlight, as we begin the transition to Steam Direct.

Retiring Greenlight
The information below on Greenlight and Steam Direct is going to be most relevant for game developers, as it discusses the nuts-and-bolts details of the transition.

As of now, we are no longer accepting new game or software submissions via Steam Greenlight and voting has been disabled. One week from today, on June 13th, we'll be turning on Steam Direct.

Over the next week, a team here at Valve will be reviewing the list of titles that have not yet been Greenlit and will be selecting the final batch of titles to pass through the Greenlight process. Our goal is to Greenlight as many of the remaining games as we have confidence in. There are some titles that will not be Greenlit, due to insufficient voter data or concerns about the game reported by voters. Titles that are not ultimately Greenlit may still be brought to Steam via Steam Direct, provided they meet our basic criteria of legality and appropriateness.

If you are a game developer with a game in Greenlight that hasn't been Greenlit yet, please be patient as we review the 3,400+ pending submissions. If you bought the Greenlight Submission fee, but haven't had a chance to post a submission, or if your submission has not been Greenlit by the end of this process, you can use the Steam support site to request a refund of your submission fee.

Steam Direct details
The goal with Steam Direct is to provide an understandable and predictable path for developers from anywhere in the world to bring their games to Steam. With that in mind, we're making the process as easy and streamlined as possible. A new developer will simply need to fill out some digital paperwork, including entering bank and tax information and going through a quick identity verification process. After completing the paperwork, the developer will be asked to pay a $100 recoupable fee for each game they wish to release on Steam. This fee is returned in the payment period after the game has sold $1,000.

As we have been doing for the past year, there is a short process prior to release where our review team installs each game to check that it is configured correctly, matches the description provided on the store page, and doesn't contain malicious content.

Additionally, brand-new developers that we haven't worked with before will need to wait 30 days from the time they pay the app fee until they can release their first game on Steam. This gives us time to review the developer's information and confirm that we know who we're doing business with. Developers will also need to put up a 'coming soon' page for a couple of weeks prior to release, which helps get more eyes on upcoming releases and gives players a chance to point out discrepancies that our team may not be able to catch.

Steam Direct will launch in one week, on June 13th.

RA_MeSiAs

Una pena para los devs que lo usaban bien, pero un altisimo porcentaje de juegos eran para sacar pasta de los cromos o bien niños ratas con RPG Maker que sacaban juegos y luego o no los terminaban o eran una mierda enorme.

2 1 respuesta
B

Para el que no quiera leerse el tocho en inglés, dejo este video en el que creo que se explica bastante bien los cambios y el porqué:

Iree7

Una lástima, descubrí algunos juegos buenos gracias a Greenlight. Pero sí que es cierto que había mucho negocio oculto ahí, todos los casos de "te regalo una key cuando el juego se apruebe en Steam si me votas a favor", y claro, eso al final ensucia muchísimo el sistema.

RandomZ

Ojalá saber inglés.

tute07011988

Me espero a que clandlan saque la traducción.

18
tarzanete

Greenlight tambien tenía una cuota de 100$ o casi.

1 respuesta
atom

#7 Era una cuota única, ahora son 100$ por cada juego que quieras publicar.

Hardy

Como dice #2 es una pena para los devs serios. Pero por culpa de Greenlight se llenó la tienda de Steam de una infinidad de juegos que son pura mierda.

1
s3rxus

el "problema" en realidad es que Steam quiere ahorrase un departamento de calidad y hace que los usuarios jueguen este rol; si todos tomáramos este en serio pues probablemente funcionaria pero como vendemos nuestros votos por una key pues se corrompe el sistema.

1 respuesta
B

#10 No es ahorrarse ellos un equipo de calidad. En el tochopost lo comentan que gracias a greenlight han entrado un montón de juegos que ellos mismos no habrían dado el visto bueno por ser juegos para un público nicho y que con Greenlight han encontrado su hueco y han obtenido muchísimo.

Pero como todo sístema, es corrompible.

No me desagrada la idea de pagar 100€ por juego. Eso cortará a gente que los subía por ver si algún pardillo compra. Aunque siempre los habrá

1 respuesta
s3rxus

#11 pero si antes costaba 100 dolares igualmente.

Es igual, esto por lo menos traerá o espero una mejor calidad a los juegos que lleguen.

1 respuesta
B

#12 100 $ por estar en greenlight con todos los juegos que subas vs 100$ por cada juego que quieras subir.

La diferencia para los equipos de trabajo es subir juegos de menos de 2 semanas de producción a juegos con un curro detrás con espensas de generar dinero, al menos para no perder los 100$

B

100 $ no es dinero para nadie. El proceso para conseguir el greenlight de tu juego era en sí más costoso de 100$. Implicaba pagar con miles de keys o con dinero a los promotores de Greenlight que había por toda la red,

Esta medida va enfocada exclusivamente a que Valve recaude más dinero. Gracias a Greenlight había terceros que se lucraban durante el proceso para pasar el greenlight. A estos terceros se las ha terminado el chollo, porque a partir de ahora todo el dinero irá para Valve.

La medida adicional que va a tomar Valve obligando a haber realizado un mínimo de ventas en la tienda de Steam para poder activar las steam cards para ese juego, si puede suponer una pequeña criba. Sobre todo para aquellos que están subiendo juegos de 2 minutos de duración para recaudar dinero sólo con las steam trading cards.

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