Storybook Brawl is a popular free-to-play card game on Steam. It has a fairly large and active playerbase who enjoy the game a lot. And now almost all of them seem angry and are review bombing the gameâs Steam page after the devs behind Storybook Brawl announced plans to integrate NFTs and blockchain technology into it.
On March 22, Good Luck Games, the company behind Storybook Brawl, announced that the studio had been acquired by FTX US. For those who arenât aware, FTX is a cryptocurrency exchange that started in 2019 in the Bahamas and has since expanded across the globe. Itâs also recently been investing heavily into creating a gaming division, launching FTX Gaming last year because it âsees games as an exciting use case for crypto.â
In the announcement from Good Luck Games, the company shared vague plans about incorporating NFT and blockchain tech into Storybook Brawl. According to the studio, it also promises it will make sure that the integration is âethicalâ and makes the game âbetter for playersâ while making sure the âfun comes first.â (Huh, vague promises and nonspecific plans are always a part of these NFT/blockchain announcements. Weird!)

If youâve been paying attention to NFT news on Kotaku and other sites over the last 12 months or so you can probably guess what happened next. (I mean, the headline gives it away tooâŠ)
Players responded to the news with near-universal negativity. Over on the gameâs Steam page, you can see a huge increase in recent, negative reviews. The game now sports an âOverwhelmingly Negativeâ review status as result.
As spotted by Eurogamer, reportedly one of the devs mentioned in the gameâs Discord server that it was looking at non-cosmetic options for NFTs, too. Which further angered the community.
Update: 03/29/22: 2:25 p.m. ET: Good Luck Games explained to Kotaku that it believes the negative backlash to its recent NFT news is mostly coming from a âsmall but vocal segmentâ of its playerbase, though it also clarified that it wants to make sure all of its players âfeel heard and know that their concerns are important.â
Good Luck Games also reiterated that it wants all of its NFT integration to be âethicalâ and âfunâ and cited its blockchain partner, Solana, as an example of the plan. â[Solana uses] proof of stake technology that is dramatically more green than proof of work technologies like bitcoin.â
As for what NFTs can actually add to a game like Storybook Brawl, one example given involved a player buying a skin, not liking it, and then selling it to a different player. However specific plans are still being figured out.
âIf we can get it right when it comes to fun and balance, we will bring it to the players,â explained Good Luck Games. âAnd if we donât, we wonât.â
Original story continues below.
This is far from the first time weâve seen this song and dance play out. Over the last year or so weâve seen multiple examples of game companies announcing NFT plans and then immediately receiving backlash from players and other game devs
Many consider the tech a giant scam, filled with grifters and con artists looking to make a quick buck before the bubble bursts. There are also problems with how blockchain technology can lead to more e-waste as well as accelerate global warming, waste electricity and make it harder for folks to find and buy specific computer parts, like GPUs.
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