Just over a week after announcing an October open beta for the Steam edition of Team Fortress 2 Classic, the throwback version of Valve’s famed team-based shooter, developer Eminoma has an update: Never mind.
It turns out that an application on Steam can’t be both a mod, which Team Fortress 2 Classic is, and a demo, which it was about to be, at the same time. You might think somebody would have flagged this ahead of time but, well, no.
“Unfortunately, this was not caught by anyone at Eminoma or at Valve until last Saturday, after initial reviews hadn’t flagged it as an issue and gave us the mistaken belief that we were clear to ship,” the dev team wrote.
The good news is that the mod is not at risk of being derailed: Eminoma said it’s “still very much on track for full release,” and that the effort to get everything ready for the cancelled open beta means it’s “probably in a better spot than we would have been if we never attempted this in the first place.”
But there is also the possibility that something may have to change—specifically, the name of the mod. The team explained:
“Valve has asked us to ███████, due to concerns that the ████ ████ ████████ █ ███████ is too ███████ ██ ████ ████████ ███████.”We’re inclined to agree.
“This sparked internal conversations, and encouraged us to start thinking ██████ █████ ███ █████ ███████, aiming to tie it into our ████████ ███ ███ ██████. We aren’t flipping the script on ████ ███ ████ █████, but we want this to be a ███ ███, and we want our ████████ to ██████████ █████████ what we’ve been █████ and what’s █████ █████.”
The redactions are amusing but do make it tricky to decipher what exactly is going on. But Valve fan community LambdaGeneration (via PCGamesN) noticed a change to Source SDK documentation, which now declares that mods “should have a unique identity,” and should not imply that they’re created or endorsed by Valve. “This extends to all places where you talk about your mod, including its title. We may deny titles that imply a mod being an official prequel, sequel, or remake of a Valve title.”
Few hours later, Valve has updated the Source SDK licensing (and Steamworks) documentation when publishing Community-Mods on Steam with a new section about what should and shouldn’t be used in your mod’s title like “Ricochet Classic” or “Ricochet: Source”. pic.twitter.com/aX10MH7tF6October 7, 2025
That describes Team Fortress 2 Classic to a T, and so a name change could be in order. Also hinting at some sort of new identity are changes to graphics on the Team Fortress 2 Classic Steam page. What used to be this:
Is now this:
So the good news is that this isn’t a cease-and-desist situation, just a bit of an extra wait: Eminoma said you’ll be hearing from them “sooner than you think.” In the meantime, ff you really want to play TF2 Classic right now, you can still do it the old-fashioned way at tf2classic.com.
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