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Valve Verified ‘Alien Orgy’ Footage Before Steam Launch

▼ Summary

– Valve released over 20,000 new games on Steam in 2025, making it a massive task to review each one for content before sale.
– The publisher of “Earth Must Die” was required to send Valve footage of an alien orgy scene for context verification before the game could launch.
– Valve initially stated it was “unable to verify” the context of the orgy, creating uncertainty about the game’s release approval.
– The alien orgy was ultimately approved by Valve, allowing “Earth Must Die” to be released on the Steam platform.
– A review of the game notes it is an inventive adventure but is “just a bit too obsessed with orgies,” which has increased some players’ interest.

The sheer volume of new titles launching on Steam each year raises a natural question about content moderation. With thousands of games submitted, the practical logistics of reviewing every asset are daunting. Yet, a recent incident involving the comedy adventure Earth Must Die demonstrates that Valve does, in fact, conduct specific checks on content that flags their internal systems. The publisher, No More Robots, revealed that the game’s launch was nearly blocked because Valve required clarification on a particular scene.

Prior to release, Valve contacted the developers stating they were “unable to verify” the context of an described “alien orgy.” This was not a simple textual note; the platform requested actual visual evidence. The team was required to record and submit direct footage of the animated sequence for official review. This highlights the sometimes granular level of scrutiny applied, even within a system that largely relies on automated tools and post-publication reporting.

The publisher shared the unusual request with a dose of humor, comparing Valve’s need for “verification and context” to a flimsy personal excuse for watching questionable material. Ultimately, the submitted footage passed inspection. The alien orgy, depicted as a gyrating lump on the floor, was deemed acceptable for the platform, and Earth Must Die received approval for its Steam launch.

This episode underscores the unpredictable nature of content policing on massive storefronts. What triggers a manual review can seem arbitrary, but it shows that human judgment is still involved in certain cases. The game itself, which features a satirical narrative about reality television set in space, had already garnered attention for its adult themes. A prior review noted the title’s inventive adventure mechanics but also its peculiar fixation on orgies, a detail that likely contributed to the extra administrative hurdle.

For players, such behind-the-scenes stories add a layer of intrigue to a game’s release. The very act of Valve demanding to see an alien orgy arguably generates more curiosity than the scene itself would have alone. It turns a routine content check into a memorable anecdote that fuels discussion and, potentially, interest in the product. The system, while imperfect and stretched thin, occasionally produces these bizarre, human-centric moments that remind everyone that actual people are involved in the process.

(Source: PC Gamer)

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