Indie GamesSocial Hub
YOUR GAME DESERVCES A SPACE
No credit card. Publish a game page in minutes.
Starfield Odyssey
Procedural space exploration with weekly build notes and player feedback.
4.9
rating
1.8k
wishlists
12
devlogs
Devlog
Demo build is live
Looking for feedback on navigation, controller feel, and first boss readability.
128 likes · 24 comments
Feedback
Players are replying in context
Every comment, review, and wishlist stays connected to the game page.
Developer replied
Review
The movement finally clicks
A player review becomes useful proof for the next visitor.
5.0 rating
Game pages
for devlogs, reviews, screenshots, and links
Wishlists
to turn attention into visible player intent
Followers
so players can keep up with creators and studios
Why GamerLog
Game updates deserve a better place than a lost social post.
Most indie games have progress scattered across store pages, Discord, social posts, and screenshots. GamerLog brings the story, feedback, and player intent back to the game.
Updates disappear fast
A post gets attention for a day, then the context is gone. The game page should keep that progress useful.
Feedback gets scattered
Comments, reviews, and questions are more useful when they stay connected to the exact game.
Momentum is hard to show
Followers, reviews, wishlists, and devlogs help new players understand that a game is alive.
Game pages
A living page for every game you publish.
Add the trailer, screenshots, devlogs, updates, reviews, shelves, and community activity in one clean place.
One clean page for each game
Screenshots, trailer, description, links, status, devlogs, and community proof stay together.
A feed that points back to the game
Every update can bring players back to the page instead of sending them into a dead-end post.
Simple signals before launch
Wishlists, follows, ratings, and comments help developers understand what is working.
Cave Chronicles
Metroidvania · Early Access
4.7
rating
312
wishlists
6
devlogs
Latest devlog
Mushroom forest boss is ready for testers. Patch notes, build link, and feedback questions are inside.
What you can do
Everything around the game, not away from it.
GamerLog focuses on the loop that actually matters: post progress, attract players, collect signals, and keep momentum visible.
Devlogs
Share progress updates, screenshots, videos, polls, and build notes.
Wishlists
Let players save games they want to follow, play, or buy later.
Reviews
Collect player ratings and written feedback that future visitors can trust.
Profiles
Follow developers, studios, and players behind the games.
Discovery
Browse games by status, genre, platform, rankings, and activity.
Momentum
See attention build through followers, ratings, wishlists, and posts.
Rankings
Highlight games, creators, and studios earning community attention.
XP
Reward shipping, reviewing, posting, and supporting the community.
Built for both sides
Creators get momentum. Players get better discovery.
The product works because both groups meet around the same artifact: the game page.
Build an audience while building the game.
Publish a living game page
Make your project easier to understand, follow, and trust.
Share progress without losing context
Each update stays connected to the game it is promoting.
Collect useful player signals
Wishlists, reviews, comments, and follows show what is resonating.
Discover games with people behind them.
Follow games before they launch
Track interesting projects early and come back when they update.
Find creators worth watching
Follow developers and studios, not just finished products.
Leave feedback that matters
Comment, review, and wishlist where the creator can actually see it.
The loop
A simple rhythm for building interest.
Small updates become visible signals. Players follow the game. The next update has a warmer audience.
Post
Share a build, screenshot, question, or devlog.
Reach
Followers and curious players see it in the feed.
Discuss
Players reply with questions and feedback.
Review
The game earns ratings and credibility.
Follow
New fans stick around for the next update.
Give your game a place to grow.
Publish your first game page, share progress, and start building an audience before launch.