The Ukrainian government will petition Valve, Microsoft, and Sony to ban sales of Atomic Heart on their corresponding storefronts.
Earlier today on February 22, Ukrainian deputy minister of digital transformation Alex Bornyakov issued a statement to Ukrainian website Dev.au (opens in new tab) (which was translated by PCGamesN (opens in new tab)). In short, the Ukrainian government is seeking to get digital sales of the Russian-developed Atomic Heart halted on several platforms, but only in Ukraine.
"Regarding the situation with the release of the game Atomic Heart, which has Russian roots and romanticises communist ideology and the Soviet Union, The Ministry of Digital Transformation of Ukraine will send an official letter to Sony, Microsoft, and Valve requesting a ban on selling digital versions of this game in Ukraine," Bornyakov told the outlet.
"We also urge limiting the distribution of this game in other countries due to its toxicity, potential data collection of users, and the potential use of money raised from game purchases to conduct a war against Ukraine," Bornyakov's statement continues. The "potential data collection of users" part of this sentence refers to a previous statement on developer Mundfish's website, revealing it would collect data from Atomic Heart users on behalf of the Russian government.
When asked by GamesRadar+ for clarification surrounding the collection of data, Mundfish said this was an outdated portion of their website, and denied the data harvesting completely. After the statement was issued to GamesRadar+, the entire section of Mundfish's website pertaining to the data collection was deleted.
"According to media reports, the game’s development was funded by Russian enterprises," the
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