A New Game is launched Stop Killing Games reaches its 1 million signature goal after a desperate month where it seemed doomed to fail, but it’s looking for more because “there’s a chance a significant number of them aren’t real” is launched.
Stop Killing Games reaches its 1 million signature goal after a desperate month where it seemed doomed to fail, but it’s looking for more because “there’s a chance a significant number of them aren’t real”new features
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“We have to keep signing in overdrive mode to make up for them!”
Stop Killing Games reaches its 1 million signature goal after a desperate month where it seemed doomed to fail, but it’s looking for more because “there’s a chance a significant number of them aren’t real” new features
While the petition seemed doomed to fail just a few weeks ago, Stop Killing Games supporters have rallied to get the 1 million signatures the EU initiative had been seeking. While it’s a moment of celebration for the campaign, its figurehead wants more signatures because he’s worried many of them could be fake.
“The site says we have cleared 1 million signatures,” YouTuber Ross Scott, who has spearheaded the campaign from the start, says on Twitter. “I hate being like this, but there’s a chance a significant number of them aren’t real. That means we have to keep signing in overdrive mode to make up for them!”
Even if some of those signatures are fake, it’s still a massive turnaround for the campaign. The EU citizen’s initiative at its heart had a deadline of July 31, and by June 23, it hadn’t even reached half of its 1 million signature goal. That’s when Scott posted a video titled “the end of Stop Killing Games,” running down the campaign’s successes and failures, with the expectation that this would be the final update on the campaign.