ARK: Survival Evolved Developers Make Good on Their First $100 Bug Finding Bounty
The process of finding and eliminating bugs in a game before release is an arduous process and can cost developers and publishers a good deal of money in QA.
The developers of ARK: Survival Evolved thought of a unique way to go about eliminating bugs in the Steam Early Access version of ARK; paying players $100 for each gameplay-effecting bug they find and report to the developers.
The first $100 bounty was made good on today with the devs paying $100 to Steam user ZeroDay(++) for the reporting of an issue that could cause the game’s servers to crash unexpectedly. After providing the team with the steps to replicate the problem, ZeroDay promptly had $100 deposited in his PayPal account.
The entire process was detailed in a post on the game’s Steam Community Forums and an update is scheduled to fix the bug in question.
You can check out ARK: Survival Evolved in all its dinosaur hunting/riding glory on Steam Early Access, or when the game officially launches on PC, PS4, and Xbox One sometime next year.
The process of finding and eliminating bugs in a game before release is an arduous process and can cost developers and publishers a good deal of money in QA.
The developers of ARK: Survival Evolved thought of a unique way to go about eliminating bugs in the Steam Early Access version of ARK; paying players $100 for each gameplay-effecting bug they find and report to the developers.
The first $100 bounty was made good on today with the devs paying $100 to Steam user ZeroDay(++) for the reporting of an issue that could cause the game’s servers to crash unexpectedly. After providing the team with the steps to replicate the problem, ZeroDay promptly had $100 deposited in his PayPal account.
The entire process was detailed in a post on the game’s Steam Community Forums and an update is scheduled to fix the bug in question.
You can check out ARK: Survival Evolved in all its dinosaur hunting/riding glory on Steam Early Access, or when the game officially launches on PC, PS4, and Xbox One sometime next year.



I've read far too many stories of doing logging on only to wake up and meet their characters chained in rape dungeons with dudes extracting blood and shyt to make items.
I dunno....this game seems like it'll be fun as fukk to play for the absurd shyt that happens but I ain't paying 30 quid to get raped 'cause I wasn't online to protect myself.