Goose Goose Duckāa social deduction game populated by lazy-eyed geese with, apparently, customizable fartsāis tearing up the Steam charts. The game has been out since 2021, released in the wake of Among Usā crewmate-shaped shadow, but its recent surge in popularity isnāt because of an inexplicable renewed interest in playing detective, but K-pop.
It seems to have started that way, at least. The game, which involves completing a mission with teammates while trying to unmask a traitor (or as one Steam review puts it, āAmongooseā), made it on BTS member Kim āVā Tae-hyungās Weverse stream, where he plays multiplayer games like Fall Guys with fans, back in November.
Weverse is Korean entertainment company Hybe Corporationās version of Patreon, essentially, a spot for fans to interact with BTS and each other after they pay for a membership fee. And pay they do. By December 5, Tae-hyungās Goose Goose Duck stream had already stacked over 8 million views on the fan app, Korean gaming magazine Game Meca reports. Those views had a real impact. After the gameās Weverse debut, its player count got an astronomic kickāfrom around 4,000 players in November to 61,000 in December
āIn 10 days after Vās broadcast, Goose Goose Duckās number of users increased five times, and about two weeks later, it increased more than 10 times,ā a translation of that Game Meca article says.
But Tae-hyung hasnāt streamed Goose Goose Duck since November, and the game has only been getting more popular. On January 2, massive player demand forced developers to improve server capacity. The game also recently reached its all-time peak on January 5 with 563,677 concurrent players, SteamDB indicates. In comparison, Among Us peaked at 447,476 concurrent players two years ago. And thatās in spite of Tae-hyung streaming that game in November, too. So maybe K-pop doesnāt have the golden touch. Maybe people just really love geese.
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