GOG just mailed out a Slavic fantasy promo that looked like it crawled straight out of 1943. The newsletter for The End of the Sun slapped SS lightning-bolt runes and a Sonnenrad right in the subject line, complete with the wrong game logo and mobile rendering that made the whole thing pop even harder. They called it a "series of mistakes" — wrong placement, missed German QA notes, understaffed bank holiday, and fonts that turned innocent sun symbols into Nazi calling cards.

The devs of the Polish-made game jumped in fast to clarify their kolovrat was meant as a sun god emblem from ancient statues, not some neo-Nazi dogwhistle, and they swapped it to a safer roseta logo months ago. GOG's apology landed on X with the usual corporate mea culpa, but the internet wasn't buying the "unfortunate visual association" excuse when two explicit SS bolts showed up uninvited. Reddit threads lit up with screenshots and demands for heads to roll, while some users shrugged it off as a dumb AI suggestion or font fuckup.

This isn't some deep conspiracy — it's peak corporate incompetence in a world where everyone has a phone camera and zero tolerance for this shit. GOG's still pushing the game on their storefront, but the damage is done: another reminder that even "good guy" digital stores can botch basic symbol checks when chasing that Slavic adventure dollar.