Epic is paying devs to only distribute on their Store, they are not competing with a better product, they’re trying to compete with deeper wallets. Because of this I try to boycot as many games as I can that have even the resemblance of a connection to their store.
Beyond that I don’t trust Epic, their store practice has shown them to be plenty untrustworthy and so I see their “free” Epic Online Service and instead of being happy about a good cross-platform online service I’m waiting for the other shoe to drop.
Their store? I dunno but a lot of games on their got a upfront payment to only be on that store. If the devs choose to limit themselves to one store, fair enough. But I have a very deep problem with them receiving payment for it. Because suddenly the game isn’t “who can attract the most customers/devs via the best platform” but instead “who can pay the devs the most”. Doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see which of the two leads to better store fronts (case in point: even EA, etc. abandon their store exclusivity regularly because customers refuse to use inferior stores/launchers and want to stay on steam)
Epic is paying devs to only distribute on their Store, they are not competing with a better product, they’re trying to compete with deeper wallets. Because of this I try to boycot as many games as I can that have even the resemblance of a connection to their store.
Beyond that I don’t trust Epic, their store practice has shown them to be plenty untrustworthy and so I see their “free” Epic Online Service and instead of being happy about a good cross-platform online service I’m waiting for the other shoe to drop.
I’m not really paying attention, is it more than games that are using unreal engine?
Their store? I dunno but a lot of games on their got a upfront payment to only be on that store. If the devs choose to limit themselves to one store, fair enough. But I have a very deep problem with them receiving payment for it. Because suddenly the game isn’t “who can attract the most customers/devs via the best platform” but instead “who can pay the devs the most”. Doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see which of the two leads to better store fronts (case in point: even EA, etc. abandon their store exclusivity regularly because customers refuse to use inferior stores/launchers and want to stay on steam)