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Did a single complaint ruin the Dota 2 Arcade for everyone? And what can save it from Valve? SUNSfan and Jenkins might have the answer.

The Dota 2 community is the only hope for the future of the Dota 2 Arcade — that’s the conclusion Andrew “Jenkins” Jenkins and Shannon “SUNSfan” Scotten came to during a dramatic video explaining the current Dota 2 Arcade situation.

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In the video, the pair, co-creators and project leads of the Ability Arena custom game, broke down the timeline and reasoning behind the current situation, which has seen almost all custom games in the Dota 2 Arcade receive notice from Valve tocease monetizing their games.

Valve to stop all forms of monetization in the Dota 2 Arcade

The Dota 2 Arcade will go commercial-free by late August, impacting many custom games including Ability Arena.

Sarah “KZ” Zulkiflee

The video revealed a number of fascinating details about Ability Arena and the development of custom games. Here’s just a few takeaways:

Did one tantrum cause this?

In a shocking revelation, SUNSfan revealed that the series of events that led to Valve taking this action with the Dota 2 Arcade was allegedly started by a single Ability Arena player. According to SUNSfan, that player was denied access to a special Immortals Discord channel due to filling out a form incorrectly, and subsequently engaged in harassing behavior against a Discord volunteer and was banned.

In retaliation, the player allegedly sent a General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) complaint. The GDPR is a piece of European legislation that aims to protect online privacy. Complaints and violations of GDPR can lead to legal action and fines amounting to tens of thousands of dollars. This action, in effect, awoke the sleeping giant that is Valve’s legal team, which subsequently began to look closer at the Dota 2 Arcade, leading to the current situation.

SUNSfan reveals way to save Dota 2 Arcade: “The only thing that could fix it is the community”  cover image

This account is disputed by someone claiming to be that player on theDota 2 Reddit. In that post, they claim that the volunteer they allegedly harassed was in fact Nikki “Sajedene” Elise, on-air talent, entrepreneur, and SUNSfan’s spouse. This perhaps adds an extra element to the banning, although the general consensus on the post was that the player had thrown a tantrum and used the nuclear option of a GDPR complaint.

How to save the Dota 2 Arcade

So how does this get fixed? SUNSfan and Jenkins outlined the only way to save the Dota 2 Arcade is the community making themselves heard: “So the only thing that could fix it is the [Dota 2] community. That’s the only time that Valve has done a complete 180 on a decision.”

As an example, SUNSfan gave the Dota 2 Tutorial: “Slacks came out with a Kickstarter, then within a week Valve announces a tutorial. That’s a 180 situation.”

Valve to stop all forms of monetization in the Dota 2 Arcade preview image

It’s a dire situation for custom games, and although the Dota 2 community is a vocal and often passionate one, they’re hard to motivate for a single cause. And that doesn’t bode well for the Dota 2 Arcade, and in some ways, for Valve.

As stated in the video, almost all of Valve’s own games originated with mods. Other developers, such as Epic Games with Fortnite, have recently streamlined the waycreators can monetize in-game creations. Our owninterviews with modding platform executives, there’s a consensus that the developers can’t keep up with player demand for content, and modding support is the only way to sustain that. Valve is bucking a trend while the rest of the industry adapts to it.

(Image via Ability Arena)

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(Image via Ability Arena)

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