In the longest dev apology in years, Infinity Nikki dev owns up to "nearly one hundred issues" in the dress-up RPG's new update as its Steam reviews disintegrate

Infinity Nikki trailer screenshot showing a young woman with long, light pink hair standing in a ruffled white blouse, her expression surprised
(Image credit: Infold Games)

If the original version of free-to-play, dress-up RPG 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Infinity Nikki is a pic💞nic table laden with soda bottles, banana cream, and🎃 strawberry jello, its new Steam version and Bubble Season update are cold hot dogs covered in ants. Developer Papergames apologizes for that in a letter so heartfelt, so pure – it alone could save the world. But it doesn't seem to be appeasing most players.

"Dear Styꦐlists, hope this message ꧑finds you well," Papergames begins politely in its statement .

currently rated "Most Helpful" reads like a dying wish: "Do not play this game if you do not want to be exploited."

"They made a bathtub $10," comments another negative Steam review, this one with over 350 "helpful" ratings. "That better drown my ene♋mies for me for that price."

To defend itself, Papergames says in its statement "we understand that every stylist's love and trust in𒁃 Infinity Nikki is something we must cherish and uphold with the utmost dedicatio♓n."

"Every member of our team shares the same deep love for the Nikki IP and treats every version update with the utmost care and commitment," Papergames continues in 🌟its apology letter. "We stand together with all our stylists. [...] Please give us one more chance – to let 🦂Nikki's starlight continue to shine for us all, and to keep the warmth in our hearts forever burning bright."

"I can't get through the cut scene," says more preoc💙cupied🍌 by Infinity Nikki's fresh bugs and glitches. "I keep falling to my death. Please fix."

After more than 200,000 wishlists, open-world dress-up game Infinity Nikki finally gets a Steam release date and some free gifts to celebrate.

Ashley is a Senior Writer at GamesRadar+. She's been a staff writer at Kotaku and Inverse, too, and she's written freelance pieces about horror and women in games for sites lik⛎e Rolling Stone, Vulture, IGN, and Polygon. When she's not covering gaming news, she's usually working on expanding her doll collection while watching Saw movies one through 11.

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