SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2026|No. 1957
Gaming · Controversy · Apology

GOG Apologizes for Including Nazi Symbols in Newsletter

GOG issued an apology after a newsletter for the game The End of the Sun featured symbols resembling Nazi SS insignia, attributing the error to a series of mistakes.

GOG's newsletter for The End of the Sun displayed two Slavic runes that were misinterpreted as Nazi SS symbols, leading to an apology.
GOG's newsletter for The End of the Sun displayed two Slavic runes that were misinterpreted as Nazi SS symbols, leading to an apology.
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GOG apologizes for emailing people Nazi symbols

The company sent a newsletter that included the double-S symbol associated with the Nazi Schutzstaffel.

by Terrence O'Brien Jun 6, 2026, 1:59 PM EDT

gog-logo

Good ol’ games? Image: GOG

GOG sent a newsletter about the game The End of the Sun on June 5th that included symbols associated with the Nazi SS. The Steam competitor issued a statement attributing the inclusion to a “ series of mistakes,” including miscommunication with the German QA team, inconsistent font rendering, and being understaffed during a bank holiday, among other things.

The game is a fantasy title set in a universe based on Slavic mythology and culture. So GOG included Slavic runes in its email promoting the title, including the Sowilō symbol, which means “sun.” According to one of GOG’s multiple explanations, some platforms, including mobile phones, rendered the rune as ϟ.

Heading of GOG newsletter about fantasy game The End of the Sun showing symbols associated with the Nazi SS.

Image: @vaurealis (X)

Adding confusion to the situation is a statement posted on Reddit by a verified GOG rep saying:

“I also recognize that placing two such runes next to each other could create an unfortunate association with symbols used by the Nazi regime. This was noticed before distribution, and out of respect for local sensitivities, the material was not sent to the German community.”

This has led many users to question why the newsletter was sent out to other localities or why the symbol was even doubled up in the first place.

The developers of the game have also expressed confusion, posting in a Reddit thread, “We don’t know why GOG used symbols in their newsletter. Really, we were also totally surprised when we saw the logo in the newsletter (the old logo) and the symbols next to the newsletter title.”

PAN's pipeline reviewed approximately 1 open sources for this article. No human editor reviewed this article before publication.

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