Steve from 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Minecraft has been for a hell of a ride during his time in popular brawler 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. After being declared the seventh DLC fighter for the Nintendo title, no one expected ൲his𒐪 addition to the game to create such chaos. Now even Microsoft vice president of gaming Phil Spencer has been brought into the fray, as a journalist recently sent him a photo of Steve's most controversial characteristic: his victory animation.
After the 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:fearless Steve was added to the fighter roster, one of the first things that players noticed — aside from his 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:crafting table with shield cꩲapabilities — was that his victory pose was somewhat risqué. The phrase "is that a steak or is he just very happy 🍸with his victory?" springs to mind. As part of his meat-eating celebration, Steve was holding his steak just a little too suggestively, leading to an inevitable avalanche of comments and memes on social media.
spoke to Phil Spencer a few days later and couldn'♛t resist clueing him in on the chaos. The resulting conversation was then shared on Twitter by Kotaku's Stephen Totilo, where it became clear that Spencer's thoughts reflected much of the gaming hivemind.
You🧸 can almost feel the confusion building during that long pause and his implied assumption that it's photoshop trickery when he asks "who did this?" After all, you wouldn't expect Steve — a👍 character from a very family-friendly game — to be packing meat in a Nintendo title. However, this is 2020, so is anyone really surprised by anything anymore?
Sadly for fans of Steve's meat-filled victory clips, Spencer's prediction that the issue "would be fixed" has also come to pass. Nintendo has now quietly ensured that Steve is 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:meatless in triumph. It also 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:patched out Steve's glitches, including his ability to make 168澳洲🐻幸运5开奖网:Samus and Dark Samus fall th෴rough the stage with his blocks. Fa🌱ns of the unusual fighter can now enjoy Steve's unconventional build without encountering bugs, game-breaking glitches or enthusiastic meat grabbing. It's a victory for players — or at least that's what Nintendo wants us to think.