Legal

Privacy Policy

Plain language. No surprises.

Last updated: May 2026

Who we are

Affirmation Nation is an indie game developed by Chinyere Ajufoh-Obi. This website at affirmationnation.ca is the official home for the game, where you can learn about it and sign up to be notified when it launches.

If you have any questions about this policy, you can reach us at chinyere@affirmationnation.ca.

What information we collect

We only collect information you give us directly. The only way this happens on our site right now is through the waitlist sign-up form.

When you join the waitlist, we collect:

We do not collect payment information, passwords, or any sensitive personal data.

How we use your information

The information you provide through the waitlist form is used for one purpose only - to notify you when Affirmation Nation launches on Steam and to share relevant updates about the game's development.

We will not sell your information to anyone. We will not share it with third parties for marketing purposes. You can ask us to remove you from the list at any time by emailing chinyere@affirmationnation.ca.

Where your information is stored

Waitlist submissions are handled through Google Forms and stored in Google Sheets, both part of Google Workspace. Google's privacy policy applies to how they handle and store that data - you can read it at policies.google.com/privacy.

We do not operate our own database or store your personal information on our web servers.

Third-party services on this site

This website uses a small number of third-party services to function properly:

Google Analytics (GA4) - We use Google Analytics to understand how visitors use this website. This helps us improve the site over time. Google Analytics collects information such as how long you spend on a page, which pages you visit, and roughly where in the world you are (country or city level - not your exact address). It does not collect your name or email address.

Google Analytics uses cookies to distinguish repeat visitors from new ones. You can opt out of Google Analytics tracking across all websites by installing the Google Analytics opt-out browser add-on. You can also manage or disable cookies through your browser settings.

Google's use of this data is governed by their privacy policy at policies.google.com/privacy.

Cookies

This website uses cookies through Google Analytics (GA4) to understand how visitors use the site. These are analytics cookies only - they do not identify you personally. Third-party services we use (Google Fonts, Hostinger) may also set their own cookies as part of their standard operation.

You can manage or disable cookies at any time through your browser settings, or opt out of Google Analytics specifically using the Google Analytics opt-out add-on.

Your rights

If you are based in Canada, the European Union, the United Kingdom, or California, you have rights over your personal data. These include the right to access what we hold about you, the right to correct it, and the right to ask us to delete it.

Because we hold very little data (only what you voluntarily submitted through the waitlist form), exercising these rights is straightforward - just email chinyere@affirmationnation.ca and we will take care of it promptly.

Children

This website is not directed at children under the age of 13. We do not knowingly collect personal information from children. If you believe a child has submitted information through our waitlist form, please contact us and we will delete it.

Changes to this policy

If we make any meaningful changes to this policy - for example when we add analytics - we will update the "Last updated" date at the top of this page. We recommend checking back occasionally if you want to stay informed.

Contact

For any privacy-related questions or requests, contact Chinyere Ajufoh-Obi at chinyere@affirmationnation.ca.

This policy is written in plain language and is intended to be honest and readable. It is not a substitute for legal advice. If you have specific legal compliance needs, we recommend speaking with a qualified privacy lawyer.