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The company behind Fortnite is currently in a legal fight against Google over in-app fees

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[-] BudgieMania@kbin.social 15 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

In my eyes, part of the reason for this is that they forgot a key element of penetrating a market... you need a potential customer base that is actually displeased with the current available solutions and is actually looking for an alternative. And, by and large, the current storefronts had done a good enough work of pleasing their customer base that, when the Epic Store rolled out, few people were actively looking for a switch, to the point that no bonuses or goodies or exclusives that Epic offered could outweight the friction of moving from a platform that was perfectly serviceable, please and thank you.

The whole thing was just mistimed. They should have waited to see if Steam committed some sort of fuck up. They should have waited for some type of negative sentiment. I don't know. I know that developers did feel displeased with some of the conditions on Steam, but Epic could only do so much to win them over with 88%'s and paid guarantees and what have you, when they couldn't offer them the most important thing: a paying customer base.

[-] ampersandrew@kbin.social 7 points 1 year ago

There are problems with Steam that a competitor could win customers from by solving those problems, but they didn't bother. They only went after the people producing games, not buying games.

[-] plistig@feddit.de 7 points 1 year ago

People who don't like Steam already have GoG. To most people Epic Games is the fortnite launcher, and fortnite is in rapid decline:


https://www.statista.com/statistics/1108992/fortnite-number-viewers/

[-] ripcord@kbin.social 7 points 1 year ago

As much as I like GoG, it doesn't really solve any problems that Steam has that I can think of. In fact, in several ways it seems like they've gone backwards in the last several years, imo (as a launcher/storefront alternative)

[-] ampersandrew@kbin.social 8 points 1 year ago

DRM-free games is already a big one.

[-] Mini_Moonpie@startrek.website 5 points 1 year ago

My understanding is that GoG does some work to make sure that old games they sell will work on new PCs. I have at least one game that is bugged on Steam, but works fine from GoG.

[-] skulblaka@kbin.social 3 points 1 year ago

When I bought Vampire the Masquerade from GoG it came pre-bundled with the primary community bugfix patch, I thought that was pretty neat. It didn't come baked in, so they still give you the base version of the game, but I pretty much just checked a box on install and it added it on.

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this post was submitted on 06 Nov 2023
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