Here’s another contender for Web3 is going just great (opens in new tab), the satirical website that documents each new disaster related to the ongoing blockchain-based reinvention of the internet. In its own words (opens in new tab), w3itch.io is an “open marketplace for independent game creators” where anyone can sell games and set their own prices. Sounds a lot like itch.io, a popular website that already exists, except for one key difference: w3itch.io plans to incorporate NFTs, cryptocurrency payments, and other web3 technology.
Itch hasn’t been shy about making its position plain, declaring that NFTs are a scam earlier this year. Given that Steam has banned games with NFTs or cryptocurrency, it’s natural that developers desperate to incorporate the blockchain into games want an alternative. It seems unlikely w3itch.io will be that alternative for long, as the site looks suspiciously similar to itch.io and its owner has admitted to using itch.io’s CSS files (opens in new tab).
“You have stolen the UI of itch.io,” said itch’s founder Leaf Corcoran, “blatantly ripping it off, in addition to using our name directly in your project. As far as I’m concerned, this is [a] scam to trick people by using @itchio’s established brand on an unrelated project for your own profit.”
Corcoran reported the issue as a bug on w3itch.io’s Github page (opens in new tab), which is the most developer way of handling the situation I can imagine. The problem goes further than ripping off webpage design, however, as Corcoran noted. “Additionally, upon going through the content on your platform, it appears you have stolen many games (see rpgmaker.net (opens in new tab)) for reupload without the consent of the creators of the games. For the sake of respecting creators and their work, I request that you remove stolen content from your platform.”
An official response from w3itch.io came via Twitter (opens in new tab). It says, “If you find that your content has been stolen, please leave a comment under this tweet or give me a DM and we’ll contact its uploader to coordinate with him/her to remove these contents. I would like to express my deepest gratitude to the community for the offense we caused.”
A browse through the games on w3itch.io brings up quite a few RPG Maker projects that are available elsewhere. Rather than link to them there, here are the official homes of a couple of notable examples: spooky puzzle game Ib on rpgmaker.net (opens in new tab), and the latest translation of Mortis Ghost’s perplexing mystery OFF (opens in new tab). If you’re interested in learning more about RPG Maker, here’s the secret history of the underdog game engine and how it got its bad reputation.