
Player Attack: We huddled around a glowing laptop screen in a slightly too-small hotel room. We'd been watching video game trailers all week, the latest and greatest from this developer, that publisher, and while we hated to admit it, they were all starting to blur together. Kingsley smiled and tapped "play", and we settled in for yet another dose of same-ol.
...but that's not what we got. From the opening pan across the ruined castle to the swirling, glowing particles and motes of dust - the flowing lava and falling snow - this was something different.

In his latest remarks about Valve's storefront, the Epic boss likens Steam commissions to "a car dealership demanding 30% of gas purchases."
A man that basically called all Linux users entitled cheaters and then said "Installing Linux is sort of the equivalent of moving to Canada when one doesn’t like US political trends" is stirring the pot again eh? Pot meet kettle.
Jamie Hore has been writing about gaming for seven years, and somehow still has not figured out how this industry works. Like, seriously. Publishers lowering their prices just because they now pay Valve five to ten percent less? Come on. That just sounds like someone who has not been paying any real attention to the same industry he supposedly covers.
And of course Sweeney had to jump in. That is kind of his whole thing. Instead of actually working on making his own company’s tools decent, he just deflects and points at competitors, hoping people get distracted long enough to forget that his so called alternative is worse in pretty much every conceivable way for the people that actually matter, the consumer.
Not to mention how unbelievably hypocritical he is when he talks about “benefits for developers.” As if his other tool, Unreal Engine, was not responsible for wiping out thousands of positions across the industry by pushing this massive consolidation of tools. Suddenly everyone is using the same pipeline, the same tech, the same shortcuts, and all that really does is make the eyes of publishers and executives shine greener at how much of their own talent they can cut, because now any cheaper third party studio can step in and do the job, quality be damned.
Interesting take, especially when you realize Epic Game Store has yet to tun a profit.
If they spent just as much effort improving the Epic Store as this guy does complain about Steam then maybe they would've set a new standard by now. Thnx for all the free games tho.
I was on EGS' side for a while with this kind of messaging but EGS has had years at this point and the client has barely improved it's usability at all. It's really a nuisance to look at my EGS library.

The legal dispute between Epic Games and Google has been going on for quite a while, but it could be close to a solution.

The saga of the legal battle that sees Epic Games fight Apple in the attempt to bring Fortnite back to iOS has just gained another chapter.
Wait...laptop? I've always have the impression that developers carry around their desktop PCs around to these events to showcase their demos.