THE “MODERN AUDIENCE” STRIKES AGAIN! (OR DID THEY?) 📉💣
Developers are REELING after the disastrous launch of 1348 Ex Voto! 🏰 After months of preaching about “modern heroes” and “representation for the new era,” the numbers are in—and they are catastrophic. Gamers have officially REJECTED the “Lesbian Knight” epic, and the dev team at Sedleo is reportedly FURIOUS, blaming “toxic hate” for the game’s failure! 🤬
“We built this for the modern world,” one dev source leaked, but the Steam charts tell a different story: a peak of barely 100 players. 📉 Is this a case of “Get Woke, Go Broke,” or is the game just a broken, buggy mess that even its supporters can’t defend?
The industry is in a full-blown panic as the “Modern Audience” they gambled everything on has vanished into thin air. 💨 Are you tired of being lectured, or is this just another masterpiece being suppressed by “chuds”? The comments are EXPLODING! 🍿🧨
SEE THE NUMBERS THAT HAVE DEVS SCREAMING 👇

The “Modern Audience” has long been the white whale of the gaming industry—a massive, untapped demographic that developers believe will justify a pivot away from traditional tropes. But following the March 12 launch of 1348 Ex Voto, that whale appears to have remained firmly at sea, leaving Italian studio Sedleo and publisher Dear Villagers to navigate a $25 wreckage.
The medieval action-adventure, which follows the knight-errant Aeta on a quest to save her female companion Bianca, has arrived to “Mixed” reviews on Steam and a Metacritic score languishing in the low 50s. While critics cite “unplayable” technical issues, the narrative has quickly shifted into a bitter cultural standoff.
The “Modern Hero” Gamble
Marketing for 1348 Ex Voto didn’t just sell a game; it sold an ideology. Leading up to release, social media threads and developer interviews emphasized the game’s “progressive” historical take, focusing on “sapphic” undertones and characters designed to reflect “modern sensibilities.”
The strategy backfired spectacularly when the free Steam Next Fest demo failed to break 110 concurrent players. On X (formerly Twitter), the developer’s attempts to distance themselves from “traditional” knight simulators—specifically taking veiled swipes at the successful Knight’s Path—sparked an immediate counter-backlash.
“Astroturfed” vs. Reality
“There is a massive disconnect between social media ‘likes’ and actual ‘buys,'” says one industry analyst. “1348 had thousands of retweets and glowing previews from journalists praising its ‘brave’ direction, but on launch day, the players simply weren’t there. You can’t pay rent with ‘stunning and brave’ headlines.”
Gamers on r/KotakuInAction and Steam forums have been less diplomatic, labeling the game “astroturfed slop.” They point to the game’s abysmal optimization—reportedly struggling to maintain 30 FPS even on an RTX 5090—as proof that the studio prioritized “the message” over basic software engineering.
Developers Under Fire
The real “meltdown,” however, is happening behind the scenes. Internal sources suggest that the team at Sedleo is “devastated and angry,” with some members taking to Discord to blast the gaming community for a “manufactured” hate campaign.
“They’re blaming everyone but themselves,” wrote one user on the Steam Community boards. “They blamed the ‘chuds’ for the low demo numbers. They blamed the Xbox fans when they cancelled that version. Now they’re blaming a ‘lack of media literacy’ because people hate the boring combat.”
The ‘Concord’ Effect?
Industry watchers are already drawing parallels between 1348 Ex Voto and previous high-profile failures like Concord and The Acolyte. The recurring theme? A “modern audience” that is vocal on social media but notoriously reluctant to actually open their wallets.
As Sedleo prepares a “emergency performance patch” to address the game’s broken auto-lock and facial animations, the broader question remains: Can an indie studio survive a “culture war” launch when the very audience they pandered to fails to show up? For 1348 Ex Voto, the vow to “save Bianca” may be the only thing saved in this disastrous release.
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