Your store page is what players see when they find your game on Wavedash. You edit it in the Developer Portal under your game's settings, independently of your build — a metadata update never requires a new wavedash build push.
Store-page changes go through a lightweight review before they're visible to players. The pending state is labelled in the Developer Portal; your previously-approved metadata stays live in the meantime.
Title
The name that shows up everywhere: search results, browse pages, and your game's page. Keep it clear and recognizable. You can change it later, but the slug in your game's URL doesn't update, so pick something you're willing to live with.
Description
Tell players what your game is and why they should play it. This is the main text on your store page. Lead with a one-sentence hook — what is this game, and why would someone want to play it? Follow with the key beats (what players do, what's distinctive, what platforms/modes). Keep it skimmable: short paragraphs, no wall of lore.
Cover art
A single image used in browse grids, search results, and the top of your store page. Make sure it reads as your game at a glance — cover art is what players tap on. See Content guidelines for what cover art can and can't include.
Screenshots
Upload 3–5 PNG or JPG images at native resolution. Lead with gameplay — show what it actually looks like to play. Add UI and feature shots after. Avoid stills from cutscenes, logos, or marketing beats that don't exist inside the actual game.
Trailers
Optional. A short video shown on your store page. If your game has action or interesting visuals, a trailer is worth adding. 30–60 seconds is usually enough; hook the viewer in the first few seconds because most people won't watch to the end.
Tags
Pick tags that describe your game's genre and mechanics — things like action, co-op, roguelike, puzzle. These are how players discover you through browsing and search. Favor accuracy over reach: tagging a platformer as "RPG" will drive off more viewers than it attracts.