I've got some honest criticism. It's a shame, because Unity produces some fun games. The shame? They're scammers, con artists, and liars. They play off of needy people who are looking for a way to boost their incomes. People who don't have a job, or have a job that barely pays the bills, or people who are unable to work. Those promises of big money are all lies. First, you have to play the games and accumulate a certain amount of points with the promise you'll make x amount of dollars the more you play. Then. You complete the task only to be told you must watch thirty plus videos. Once you have jumped through all their hoops, you are placed in line for payment because others are ahead of you. Finally, you get to the long awaited payday to be informed your PayPal account or whatever kind of account you use has rejected the deposit they are supposed to get from Unity. In my case, I was told to check my account name (on multiple occasions) insinuating I had given them the wrong account info. After resubmitting the correct info, they put you back in line for payment and you wait a week or more again. That time comes around, and you find the deposit was rejected again. I finally started meticulously entering my account info, checking every letter, digit, or period carefully. I'm not the sharpest knife in the drawer, but I knew I wasn't that stupid. Finally, I realized Unity was changing my account info by adding or deleting a letter. In my case, I had a double ff in my account name, and they added an extra f so it would be rejected. If I was a game developer and was offered $100,000,000.00 to work for them part time, I'd turn it down because I don't want to work for liars and thieves. Every time you watch one of their videos to earn your cash award, they get paid... but you don't. They should be ashamed of themselves, because there are desperate people hoping to make some extra money... only to find out they've been scammed. If you see a game you're playing has Unity as the maker, do yourself a favor and delete it. There are some legitimate companies that actually do pay money. It's not much, but it's better than nothing based on false promises and lies. As the old saying goes, "if it seems too good to be true, it probably is."