
Nylos
by Blue Alpaca Games · Indie
Synopsis
Nylos is a physics-based puzzle platformer where players use unique powers to solve puzzles in creative ways. Explore diverse environments from lush caves to high-tech labs. And uncover the hidden secrets of this world!
Why It Flopped
Abandoned by Developer
Developer has gone silent with no Steam activity for over two months.
No Marketing or Visibility
Peaked at 0 concurrent players, launched without a pre-existing audience, press coverage, or community.
Nylos entered Steam on Jul 19, 2026 for free with no press coverage, no pre-release community, and no visible marketing. Its first-day peak was 0 concurrent players. In 0 days on sale it has collected 0 reviews, a number too small for Steam's algorithm to register the game as a real release. On a platform that now processes hundreds of new listings every week, this is what a launch without an audience looks like: not a bad result, but no result at all.
There was no trajectory to collapse from, the launch never achieved lift. Steam's discovery loop requires engagement inputs: purchases generate reviews, reviews feed the algorithm, the algorithm drives more purchases. Nylos did not generate enough signal to enter that cycle at any point. For an independent release this is the most common failure mode: not a bad launch, but an absent one. On a platform adding hundreds of new games every week, a release with no pre-existing signal is invisible from the first hour.
Blue Alpaca Games has gone silent: the last Steam activity was over two months ago. Nylos is currently at 0% of its peak. At 0 days post-launch, the organic discovery window has nearly closed. To change the trajectory, Blue Alpaca Games would need to trigger a new algorithm cycle: a major content update that generates press, a steep price reduction that drives impulse purchases, or coverage from a creator with a relevant audience. All of those are possible. None of them are within the developer's direct control, and the current data offers no signal that any of them are coming.
Data sourced from Steam. Copies-sold figures are estimates (40 to 80× review count).