Close Menu
Animorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan HubAnimorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan Hub
    What's Hot

    The Vampire Lestat’s Best Song Isn’t Even in Season 3

    June 15, 2026

    How Natalie Lemle Wrote ‘Artifacts,’ An Art World Thriller

    June 15, 2026

    Steam Week in Review: More than 300 games released on Steam last week, and 120 of them had AI disclosures

    June 15, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Animorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan HubAnimorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan Hub
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • Art
    • Manga
    • Books
    • Fandom
    • Reviews
    • Theories
    • Characters
    • GraphicNovels
    Animorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan HubAnimorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan Hub
    Home»Reviews»Steam Week in Review: More than 300 games released on Steam last week, and 120 of them had AI disclosures
    Reviews

    Steam Week in Review: More than 300 games released on Steam last week, and 120 of them had AI disclosures

    By June 15, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email Copy Link
    Follow Us
    Google News Flipboard
    Three AI-generated videogame characters
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Android Who Dreams of Stars looks like the kind of visual novel that has appeared weekly on Steam for over a decade. Its trailer shows a series of static sci-fi anime images accompanied by simple plaintive music. It centres around “autonomous android” Eve Nova whose existence is cause for wonder and concern in a futuristic Tokyo governed by AI. In this future, “war and hunger [are] treated as relics of the past” thanks to the governing prowess of said AI.

    Uh, did AI write this? Turns out, yes. Developed by JinCycle, who has released 11 games on Steam since 2020, Android Who Dreams of Stars uses AI generated content for its “artwork, sound, story, localization, and store assets”. In other words: pretty much every element the user interacts with is made by AI. Amusingly, its low-effort trailer even includes an erroneous Steam screenshot chime.

    My Summer Love Memories is an FMV romance game whose videos, images and music were created using generative AI. Even its dialogue was composed by LLM. Meanwhile, as Ted Litchfield pointed out yesterday, Kryonull is another visual novel whose “voices in the game, as well as on the store page” were generated using AI. The developer NovelkaGames is charging a cheeky $100 for it, leading some in the Steam discussion forum to speculate that it’s a money-laundering exercise.

    Latest Videos From

    $100 AI-generated games aren’t new, though. Typical NPC was developed by SmogGames, a fairly prolific slop vendor. That visual novel released on May 11 for $100, and according to its disclosure, “all images used in the game were AI-generated. All images on the story page were also AI-generated”. SmogGames issued another $100 serving of churn on June 13 with After the Hero, though apparently only its images—and not its very many words—were AI generated. The wording of their disclosures is eerily similar.

    Joining SmogGames in this mysterious pricing exercise is KalendulaGames (notice a consistency in naming convention?) who released Velvet Emergency for $110, and in May, released Blood in the Ice and Signal Snow on the same day, both for $100, and all with heavy AI disclosures.


    You may like

    I clicked into every Steam listing for games released from June 9 here in Australia through to, well, about an hour or so ago. That’s just under a full week. During that period 338 new games released, and 120 of those had an AI disclosure.

    An AI disclosure doesn’t mean a game is predominantly made with AI like those listed above. Many developers disclose AI use for store page assets, especially for capsule images. While that’s a dubious creative and business decision—I can always immediately tell when a game’s capsule image is AI generated, making it easy to skip—it may not affect the actual game it’s advertising.

    Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

    Sometimes AI disclosures don’t really feel necessary. The developers of Underwater disclose that they use AI-generated images as art reference only, and not directly in the game itself, begging one to question whether they needed to make a “content” disclosure at all. According to Steam itself, the disclosure box is “concerned with the use of AI in creating content that ships with your game, and is consumed by players” (emphasis mine).

    Some developers use the AI disclosure box to get a touch defensive, which I guess is understandable. The creators of Kamilia insist that “less than 1%” of their game contains “AI-assisted content”, while the creator of Idlemoor uses the box to defend against using AI to make the game’s logos. “The logo images on the store are AI generated,” the developer writes. “This lets me focus on making the actual game, as I am not an artist. AI art will not appear in the game itself when you are playing.”

    Overall I was surprised by how many of these 120 games use generative AI for music and assets. I had assumed that the vast majority would be for translation and store page images. The former raises quality control questions and is obviously a disaster for actual humans who are employed to translate games, but it’s arguably less egregious compared to machine-made music, textures and narrative.


    What to read next

    One thing’s for sure: the slopscape is broadening, and with it a new style of scammy, spammy game that doesn’t seem designed—or priced—to even be played.

    Top Steam games by revenue (June 2 – 9)

    Steam releases its top sellers charts on Wednesdays, so the below chart doesn’t factor in some late week releases that might have been big, though I don’t think anything major released during last week’s Summer Games Fest frenzy.

    Swipe to scroll horizontally

    Rank

    Game

    1

    Counter-Strike 2

    2

    Forza Horizon 6

    3

    Gothic 1 Remake

    4

    Path of Exile 2

    5

    007 First Light

    6

    Steam Deck

    7

    Apex Legends

    8

    Paralives

    9

    Wuthering Waves

    10

    Subnautica 2

    Gothic 1 Remake went gangbusters, which I’m glad to see. According to THQ Nordic it sold 500,000 copies in its first week and reached a peak concurrent players count of “almost” 78,000.

    I spoke to a Polish developer last week who explained to me that Gothic is a massive phenomenon in Europe: basically a household name. It’s certainly not that well-known here in Australia and it seems not much more than a niche concern among North Americans. Whatever the case, I’m going to blast some early ’90s symphonic metal later this week and give it a go. I loved the Elex games and have wanted to jump into Gothic for years.

    Steam Deck’s appearance in the list has everything to do with stock replenishments, and the fact that it’s much, much more expensive than your average Steam game.

    Last week’s Steam deep cuts

    (Image credit: MathanGames)

    Steam review of the week

    “This is the only game where I can rummage through trash and actually get paid for it. In real life, some old lady would probably call the police”

    丨十卂匚卄丨, with a very relatable sentiment, on Where the F**k is my Bitcoin.

    disclosures Games Released Review Steam Week
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

      Related Posts

      Hide-and-seek game where you paint your body to blend in sells a million copies in four days

      June 14, 2026

      The Weekly Comics Discussion Post For Week Of June 14th, 2026

      June 14, 2026

      I went to the UK’s largest rock festival to see its one and only videogame band

      June 14, 2026
      Add A Comment
      Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

      Economy News

      The Vampire Lestat’s Best Song Isn’t Even in Season 3

      By June 15, 2026

      Spoilers follow for The Vampire Lestat Season 3, Episode 2 – “Toledo,” which is available…

      How Natalie Lemle Wrote ‘Artifacts,’ An Art World Thriller

      June 15, 2026

      Steam Week in Review: More than 300 games released on Steam last week, and 120 of them had AI disclosures

      June 15, 2026
      Top Trending

      Hallway Minus Yeet: Animorphs Book 47

      By animorphscentralJanuary 26, 2026

      Joseph here, yes I know that Book 47 is titled “The Resistance”.…

      Brooklyn Museum’s Latest Exhibition Blends Art, Fashion And Science

      By animorphscentralJanuary 26, 2026

      Brooklyn, NY, USA – May 1 2024: The entrance to the Brooklyn…

      Billionaire Adam Weitsman Acquires A Rare Nakamigos NFT

      By animorphscentralJanuary 26, 2026

      Join Our Telegram channel to stay up to date on breaking news…

      Subscribe to News

      Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

      About us

      Welcome to Animorphs Central, a fan-focused website dedicated to the world of Animorphs and science fiction storytelling.

      Animorphs Central was created for fans who love exploring alien species, epic battles, unforgettable characters, and the deeper lore of the Animorphs universe.

      Hallway Minus Yeet: Animorphs Book 47

      January 26, 2026

      Brooklyn Museum’s Latest Exhibition Blends Art, Fashion And Science

      January 26, 2026

      Billionaire Adam Weitsman Acquires A Rare Nakamigos NFT

      January 26, 2026

      Subscribe to Updates

      Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

      Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
      • About Us
      • Disclaimer
      • Get In Touch
      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms and Conditions
      © 2026 animorphscentral.blog. Designed by Pro.

      Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.