Publisher
Brightloop Games
Verified publisherBrightloop Games is a twelve-person studio whose release signing happens on a single air-gapped machine held by three named engineers, rather than in a build pipeline, and the key has not been rotated since the studio's first title. Brightloop publishes to Google Play and the Samsung Galaxy Store and posts the SHA-256 of every artifact to its public changelog on release day, which is the record APKBrowse checks these listings against. The studio confirms its APKBrowse entries before each stable release and has asked us to flag any direct download it has not authorized.
3
apps listed
3
with a certificate on file
1
category
Apps from Brightloop Games
Each listing below carries the hash and certificate fingerprint for its current build. Because these apps share a publisher, they also share a signing key — which means a build that claims to come from Brightloop Games but presents a different fingerprint is telling you something useful.
What “verified publisher” means here
It is a claim about identity, not about quality. A verified publisher on APKBrowse has demonstrated two things: that they control the domain their software ships from, and that they control the signing key their builds are signed with. We check the second against the first — a build arriving from the publisher's own release channel, signed with the key we already have on file for them, is one we can attribute with confidence.
That attribution is the whole point. Once a certificate fingerprint is recorded against a publisher, every later release can be checked against it, and anything signed with a different key stops looking like an update and starts looking like a different app wearing the same name. Android enforces this rule at install time regardless of what we say — it will refuse an update signed with a key that does not match the version already on the device. We are simply making the fingerprint visible before you get that far.
What the badge does not mean: that we have audited the code, that we endorse the app, or that the privacy policy is any good. Those are separate questions, and a verified publisher can still ship something you would rather not install. Verification tells you who wrote it. Deciding whether to trust them is still yours.