Fortnite becomes top free game on U.S. App Store overnight, but nothing is settled 


Epic Games made good on its recent promise by bringing Fortnite back to the iPhone and iPad in the U.S. after a federal court injunction forced Apple to change App Store rules around payments and commissions. Nearly five years after its removal, the game returns with a major change. Still, Fortnite is only available through the App Store in one region, and there are several reasons it could be removed again.

Payment battle royale

For the first time, players are presented with payment options before purchasing in-game currency known as V-Bucks. When you buy V-Bucks in Fortnite, you now get two choices: the Epic Games Store and Apple’s in-app purchase system. Apple’s version is familiar, fully integrated, and already configured.

The Epic Games Store button opens in the browser instead of staying in the app, but you get a 20 percent Epic Rewards bonus for using it. That makes it the better value if you’re regularly making Epic Games Store purchases, even if the flow isn’t quite as smooth. Prior to the court injunction, presenting this choice would not be allowed, especially with the marketing incentive.

Fortnite had previously been absent from the App Store since 2020 after Epic Games snuck a direct payment option for V-Bucks into the app to intentionally violate Apple’s rules. The move was a calculated protest against Apple’s 30% commission on in-app purchases, and it sparked a years-long antitrust battle between the two companies.

Epic claimed victory after a federal judge ruled that Apple could no longer block developers from linking to or advertising external payment methods. The ruling also prohibited Apple from applying a 27% commission on out-of-app purchases initiated through in-app links.

Fortnite tops the App Store, but its fate remains uncertain

Fortnite didn’t just get approved after the standard app review process. Far from it. Instead, Epic submitted the app a week after Apple’s forced policy change, and then started raising questions in court about Apple dragging its feet. When it looked like Apple executives might have to explain themselves to a judge, the app was suddenly approved. Less than 24 hours later, Fortnite is the top free game in the U.S. App Store.

But this is far from over. Apple is appealing the ruling that forced these App Store changes. Apple also asked for a stay that would let it go back to the old rules while the appeal plays out. If granted, Fortnite’s fate would be right back in limbo.

If Apple is granted the stay or wins the appeal, Epic either walks or forces Apple to boot them again. For Epic, Fortnite being in the App Store is contingent on payment choice. For now, Fortnite’s return is held together entirely by court pressure, and nothing is settled business.

Only in America, and still not on the Mac

Right now, Fortnite is only back in the U.S. App Store. Even in the EU, Epic is using its own store and alternative distribution options made possible by the Digital Markets Act.

If you’re outside the U.S. or EU, cloud gaming is still your best option for iOS. NVIDIA GeForce Now offers a free tier (with time limits and ads) and paid options that run $10 to $20 USD per month depending on performance level. Xbox Cloud Gaming is another option, and there are others, but none offer the native app experience that comes with App Store distribution.

Even in the U.S., Fortnite players may find that the game is available on the App Store, but it requires more RAM than their hardware has to actually run. Apple’s latest A16 11-inch iPad for $299 (reg. $349) is a safe upgrade option on a budget.

Cloud gaming doesn’t have that limitation. If your device can stream video and handle a controller, you can play Fortnite through services like GeForce Now, regardless of RAM. Native apps have benefits, but only if your hardware can actually run the game.

Separately, Fortnite for Mac has been offline since 2020. That decision was part of Epic’s protest against Apple’s policies. And even though nothing is technically stopping a return today, it hasn’t happened.

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.



Source link

Previous articleThe price of AI? Adobe hikes Creative Cloud subscriptions for some with new Pro plan – here’s what you need to know