Just a few weeks after Hook Up: The Game released on Android, developer Sophie Artemigi was surprised to see the visual novel flagged for inappropriate sexual content.
By the gameâs own description, you play as Alex, âa sex positive twenty-somethingâ who matches with her old high school bully on a dating app, so of course, sexual themes are part of the package. But inappropriate? That was unexpected.
Google Play does warn developers that content designed to be âsexually gratifyingâ is not allowed on the platform, but it can be tricky to know how exactly thatâs being enforced. Take 7 Sexy Sins, for example, a game which has the player removing the armor from anime demon girls, only to âsnap some pictures⊠for personal usesâ. Itâs got an age rating of 12+ and has been downloaded more than 10,000 times without being pulled from the platform.
By contrast, Hook Up: The Game is a narrative game about dating, relationships and learning to deal with past trauma.
Artemigi appealed the decision to find out exactly what had crossed the line in this case.
In response she was told that Google âdonât allow apps that contain or promote sexual content or profanityâ, or âappear to promote a sexual act in exchange for compensationâ.
âFor exampleâ, the response continued, âyour app screenshots currently contain an image that depicts sexually suggestive poses and sexual nudityâ.
The following image was included as proof, with red rectangles drawn over the offending content.

Youâll note that the characterâs breasts have been highlighted, but so has her belly button, which is just totally bizarre. Accordingly, Artemigi emailed back with her counterarguments.
First of all, Hook Up has nothing to do with sexual acts being performed in âexchange for compensationâ, she explained. In an email shown to Kotaku, Artemigi asked why Google was conflating provocatively dressed women with sex workers?
As for the image itself, Artemigi argued that itâs meant to be reflective of the kind of pictures you might find on a dating app, which typically do not allow for pictures that are too revealing. Itâs worth clarifying that Alex is not nude in this screenshot, but even if she was, the Play Storeâs own policy states that nudity âmay be allowed if the primary purpose is educational, documentary, scientific or artistic, and is not gratuitousâ.
The illustration, Artemigi pointed out, was a direct reference to the statue of Napoleonâs sister and imperial princess, Pauline Boneparte, which you can see for yourself in Romeâs Galleria Borghese. Itâs also pictured at the top of this article.
âThat pose was specifically based on classical statues because thereâs a reference to Alex feeling like her bully was this Greek god,â said Artemigi. âItâs meant to be about objectifying yourself and finding beauty in oneâs self.â
But hey, sex is complicated and so, perhaps, are belly buttons.
After receiving another short reply stating that the screenshot depicts a âsexually nude and gratifying pose of a woman presented in a non-artistic wayâ, Artemigi asked to escalate the issue to somebody higher up in the policy team in the hopes of speaking to somebody who might appreciate the nuance of the situation.
The final response from her official Google contact once again pointed out that Hook Up was in violation of the platformâs policy, but this time ended with the following sentence:
âRegarding your concern about escalation, I am the highest form of escalation. Next to me is God. Do you wanna see God?â
Yikes.
âIt was almost nice though,â said Artemigi, âbecause it kind of confirmed the vibe Iâd been getting. I felt very dismissed, talked down to. At least they were honest in that one email, Iâll give them that.â
When asked for comment, Google told Kotaku that the person who wrote this email has now been removed from the developer support team.
Hook Up: The Game is still available to purchase on the Play Store, although it seemingly remains in breach of the companyâs policy, meaning that Artemigi hasnât been able to publish updates as she usually would.
Itâs unclear whether this will have also affected the gameâs standing on the platform, but itâs worth noting that despite hundreds of downloads and almost 40 reviews, searching âHook Up: The Gameâ on the Play Store doesnât bring up the game in my search results. Like, at all.
In fact, the only way I was able to find it via search was to use the full name of the developer.
Thereâs been no such problems over on iOS, although different screenshots are being used to market the game for that platform.

Some might argue that itâd be easier to just remove the screenshot altogether and see if Google is happy enough with that, but for Artemigi, this whole saga has highlighted some interesting questions about what kind of content game platforms deem to be acceptable.
âItâs a very queer, sex positive game,â said Artemigi. âIt talks about sex tangentially. You donât sext anyone, but it does deal with sexual themes. But it has a 16 rating, which is very appropriate for that. The idea that you can play GTA: San Andreas, which has prostitutes and sex workers, but god forbid you show a belly button in a game about a woman who likes sex and wants to be comfortable with her sexuality, is really frustrating.â
And thatâs not to mention the work involved in creating the game either, only to end up exchanging emails with a support team that seems, at best, completely uninterested in guiding her through a stressful process.
Along with a small team of other developers, Artemigi has spent well over a year on this project, before finally publishing it back in June.
âHook Up was done as part of my Masters at the National Film & Television School,â said Artemigi, âwhich has the unfortunate acronym of the NFTS.â
After completing her university degree, she then spent months ensuring the game was playable on different phones, playtesting and preparing for release day.
âBut in that time, I had chemotherapy and was in isolation for five months. I also had an operation removing two of my internal organs a few weeks before. It wasnât a full production period, it was me working whenever I could.â
Arthemigi has a very rare autoimmune disease called Evans syndrome, which means her immune system attacks her own red blood cells and platelets. Sheâs often hospitalized as a result, as was the case earlier this year.
âIâve managed to do all of my education, get a masters degree and release a game, without missing a single year,â said Artemigi. âItâs very liveable, but itâs not easy. Itâs definitely a disability. It definitely does impact my daily life and how I make choices.â

Despite the frustration sheâs feeling, Artemigi is still thinking about the next game she wants to develop too. This project will also challenge platform policy, she thinks, but this time itâs focusing on violence, not sex.
âItâs ridiculous that if you look at the store policies for violence, youâll get an entire page,â said Artemigi, âwhereas for sex itâs more like one line that says donât be pornographic and weâre not going to tell you what pornographic means. Iâm still going to get in trouble with them, but sex specifically is something that Iâm going to be very cautious about.â
Chris is a reporter at People Make Games