Game Marketing Company Takes Down Blog Post Bragging About How Good...
Two posts explaining the campaign, both from earlier this year, were deleted after redditors took notice.
Videogame marketing company Trap Plan is taking heat for a marketing campaign that saw roughly 100 "organic-style posts and comments" made on numerous subreddits, which were formatted in such a way that "most players didn’t even realize they were part of a marketing effort." And it probably would've stayed that way, except Trap Plan CEO Pavel Beresnev spilled the beans, not just one but twice, on his company's website.
"We published over 40 posts across major gaming subreddits such as r/pcmasterrace, r/PlayStation5, r/Mecha, and r/gaming," Beresnev wrote in a now-deleted February 2025 update (via the Internet Archive). "Each post was tailored to the tone and culture of its community. The content varied from short clips and GIFs to 'I found this game…' discovery-style posts, screenshot threads, and light discussion prompts about tactical mech combat and movement mechanics.
"We avoided direct promotion and focused on native conversation formats. Players discussed the game naturally—asking questions, comparing it to Titanfall and MechWarrior, and sharing opinions about tactical mechanics. To make posts feel authentic, our team played the game in parallel to record fresh footage and write posts that reflected real gameplay experience. This created a steady stream of credible, varied content that matched Reddit’s organic tone."
An updated version of the post at the same URL from May—also deleted, but once again the Internet Archive saves the day, don't forget to tip—said the company "strategically seeded around 100 organic-style posts and comments across relevant subreddits—from gaming and shooter communities to robotics-focused forums." The article bragged that "these contributions highlighted gameplay mechanics, sparked discussion, and organically introduced the title to engaged, high-intent audiences."
And as he did in the February post, Beresnev said "the content was crafted so seamlessly that both users and subreddit moderators engaged with it as authentic community discussion rather than promotion. This organic integration proved highly effective—serving as a catalyst that encouraged curiosity, sparked conversation, and ultimately motivated Redditors to discover and try the game on their own terms."
Both of these posts had been up for months before being noticed by the r/Games subreddit (via Kotaku), after which they were quickly deleted. It's n
Source: PC Gamer