As tax season in the United States wears on, a new game was about to release and help make the process easier...then, hours later, it was delisted on Steam.
Tax Heaven 3000, from Chair Simulator's MSCHF, is a visual novel wherein players date the main character Iris, who also helps them with their taxes. While the game plays like an average dating game, its dual purpose as a tax filing system means players have to input their Social Security number into the game, in turn increasing Iris' love for them.
MSCHF planned to release the game on March 31, but the game has since been pulled from Valve's storefront. Speaking to Polygon, co-founder Daniel Greenberg said a reason for the game's delisting wasn't given.
"[It] went through Steam's standard verification process, and was ready go live April 4th, but out of nowhere if was de-verified and removed from the platform without explanation yesterday," he explained. "That’s all we know.”
While it's pulled from Steam at time of writing, Tax Heaven 3000 will come to itch.io on March 31. It can also be purchased via MSCHF's website.
MSCHF's newest title isn't the first game to be built off a seemingly silly premise (and then show commitment to the bit). But its intentions are clear.
In Tax Heaven's product description, the developer noted how the US is infamous for making tax filing a paid, oft laborious process. Tax Heaven 3000 was made as an alternative against "predatory, parasitic bottlenecks that deliberately complicate the tax filing process in order to make it unnavigable by ordinary people."
Having players file their Social Security numbers into a specific game is likely a legal nightmare that would put Valve on the hook if its platform (or specific users) get hacked.
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