Burger Shop 3
Steam News 9 April 20261mo ago

Version 0.7.2a (signed) Update

This update simply has a signed version of the BurgerShop3.exe file from the last update. The theory is that Windows 11 Smart App Control will grow to like us more if we code sign our executables. According to The Inter…

Update log

Full Burger Shop 3 update

The complete published notes, normalized for clean reading and source attribution.

Extracted changes

0 fixes1 addition0 changes0 removals
  • Security
addedThis update simply has a signed version of the BurgerShop3.exe file from the last update. The theory is that Windows 11 Smart App Control will grow to like us more if we code sign our executables. According to The Internet, if you are getting an Application Control policy error when launching the game, you can exclude the folder in the Windows security settings as described in this thread: https://www.reddit.com/r/geometrydash/comments/1qoqczv/help_an_application_control_policy_has_blocked/ As I understand it, the way Smart App Control works is that when enough people have run a new executable, Microsoft will decide that it's ok. How does that work if people can't run the program in the first place, (you ask)? According to The Internet, Windows uses data from people who don't have Smart App Control enabled or people on older OS's like good old Windows 10 in order to evaluate new executables. Feel free to comment below if you know more about this amazing windows feature!
  • This update simply has a signed version of the BurgerShop3.exe file from the last update. The theory is that Windows 11 Smart App Control will grow to like us more if we code sign our executables.

    According to The Internet, if you are getting an Application Control policy error when launching the game, you can exclude the folder in the Windows security settings as described in this thread:

    https://www.reddit.com/r/geometrydash/comments/1qoqczv/help_an_application_control_policy_has_blocked/

    As I understand it, the way Smart App Control works is that when enough people have run a new executable, Microsoft will decide that it's ok. How does that work if people can't run the program in the first place, (you ask)? According to The Internet, Windows uses data from people who don't have Smart App Control enabled or people on older OS's like good old Windows 10 in order to evaluate new executables. Feel free to comment below if you know more about this amazing windows feature!

Source

Steam News / 9 April 2026

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