Superman Demo became a phenomenon that won love both for its sophistication and, above all, for being completely free. However, as is sometimes the case, good intentions are often intercepted by the wrong people, which ultimately happened in this case as well. Already in early November, the creator of this successful work, Tyson Butler-Boshma, found out that someone had simply stolen his creation, and then began selling it on Steam for various amounts from $10 to $50. Already on November 7, according to Insider Gaming magazine, he sent a complaint to Steam about an attempt to withdraw his work from the store’s offer.
An unpleasant period followed, when he was attacked and harassed in various ways by scammers who work with his creation both through communication and on his YouTube channel. The main argument of the scammers was that Tyson was supposed to work for the developers and now claims all the credit for the Superman demo. However, the reality is that Butler-Boshman does not want a dime for his work, which proves the falsehood of this claim. The community around the young creator is actively helping him and has so far been actively bombarding the scam product based on the Superman Demo concept, which is why Valve finally removed it from the offer.
Butler-Boshma’s priority is that his creation is not for sale, and the player community is not fooled unnecessarily into buying something that is actually available for free. It’s good that Valve actively intervened in this matter. If you’re interested in the Superman demo, you can download it for free here.
Fraudsters stole a free demo version of Unreal Engine 5 Superman and sold it on Steamhttps://t.co/8zonzujTGZ
— Insider Game (@InsiderGamingIG) November 14, 2022
Source :Indian TV
