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Indie Game REMEDIUM Hit by Steam Bug—A Cautionary Tale for Devs
- Image of the Steam logo, courtesy of Valve Corporation

One of the worst things to happen to an indie dev is a Steam bug. Imagine spending over a decade building a game—wrestling code, surviving on caffeine and stubborn hope, pouring your soul into every pixel. Then launch day arrives. You’re ready. You’re dreaming of trending charts, community buzz, maybe even a few celebratory memes. And then—nothing. Your game vanishes into the Steam void like it never existed.

That’s exactly what happened to the devs behind REMEDIUM when their 1.0 launch got blindsided by a Steam visibility bug. No “New Releases” listing. No wishlist notifications. No search results. Just silence. Ten years of work, Thanos-snapped off the map.

Valve’s response? A shrug and a daily deal slot. As if that could rewind time and recapture the momentum that launch day was supposed to deliver.

The Steam Bug That Buried REMEDIUM

The visibility glitch wasn’t just a minor hiccup—it was a full-blown existential crisis. Steam’s algorithm is the lifeblood of indie discovery. If your game doesn’t show up in the right places at the right time, it might as well not exist. And for REMEDIUM, that meant no front-page exposure, no organic traffic, and no wishlist pings to the players who’d been waiting.

The devs went public with the issue, sharing screenshots and timestamps that proved their game was missing in action. Valve eventually acknowledged the bug, but the damage was already done. That first 24 hours—the sacred launch window—was gone.

Valve’s “Make-Good” Offer: A Daily Deal Slot

To their credit, Valve didn’t ghost the devs entirely. They offered a daily deal slot as compensation—a visibility boost that might help recover some lost ground. But let’s be real: a daily deal isn’t launch day. It’s a consolation prize. And depending on timing, it might land during a crowded sale week or get buried under bigger titles.

The devs weren’t ungrateful, but they were honest. “It’s not the same,” they said. And they’re right. You don’t get a second first impression on Steam.

The Bigger Problem: Indie Devs vs Platform Fragility

REMEDIUM’s story isn’t just a bug report—it’s a cautionary tale. Steam is powerful, but it’s also fragile. One backend glitch can erase years of work. And for indie devs, who don’t have PR teams or marketing budgets to brute-force visibility, that kind of loss is devastating.

This isn’t the first time a launch has gone sideways due to platform issues, and it won’t be the last. But it should be a wake-up call—for devs, for publishers, and for Valve itself. Visibility isn’t a luxury. It’s survival.

Final Thoughts: Launch Day Shouldn’t Be a Gamble

The REMEDIUM devs did everything right. They built the game. They showed up. They launched. And they still got steamrolled by a system glitch. Valve’s apology is noted, but the real fix isn’t a daily deal—it’s making sure this doesn’t happen again.

For every indie dev out there prepping for launch, take this story to heart. Double-check your visibility settings. Document everything. Build your own hype machine. And be ready to fight for the exposure you deserve.

This article first appeared on Total Apex Gaming and was syndicated with permission.

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