At the beginning of this month, the source code of the Legacy Console version of "Minecraft" was leaked on a large scale, and a batch of never-released console versions surfaced, triggering a carnival among modders and code archaeologists. However, today, this matter took a turn in the most outrageous direction - a group of players with great imagination tried to monetize the leaked code, directly packaging the fruits of other people's labor into their own games and listing them on the Steam store.

Minecraft source code leaked! It was also secretly put on Steam for sale

This group of developers not only ported the leaked old code of the PlayStation 3 version to PC, but also seriously created a game page in Valve's store. This "new" block game is discreetly named Kogama. The page even unceremoniously notes that it supports multiplayer online cooperation. This ambitious "tribute" is scheduled to be officially released one week later - March 17, 2026.

After seeing this wave of operations, players on social platforms began to ridicule and question the brain circuits of this group of people. Directly moving Microsoft's illegal intellectual property code to the largest PC game store for commercialization is simply an open provocation to the legal department of the IT giant. Currently, developer accounts have been banned on multiple platforms, implying that they are being actively pursued.

Given how strongly Microsoft protects its intellectual property, the probability that this game will survive until March 17 is basically zero. The Steam page may be taken down at any time. However, this operation has successfully gone down in history as an extreme case of human courage.