As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases and other schemes. Learn more.

You'll soon see "lower prices" for games on the Epic Store… says Epic

Tim Sweeney reckons devs will savings on to you

Epic co-founder and CEO Tim Sweeney predicts that games will become cheaper on the Epic Games store, as developers learn to on the savings from their larger revenue share on to consumers.

Epic grabbed headlines when launching its store by declaring it would take only 12% of revenue from each game sale, compared to the 30% cut that Steam has long taken. Despite this, prices on the Epic store – which are entirely set by the games' developers – have seen no real change so far. But Sweeney predicts this won't remain the case:

"After you go through several cycles of game developers making decisions, you're going to see lower prices as developers on the savings to customers, realising they can sell more copies if they have a better price," says Sweeney, speaking with Ars Technica during the Game Developers' Conference last week. "This sort of economic competition is really healthy for the whole industry and will lead the industry to a better place for all developers and for gamers as well."

Epic's strategy of tempting devs away from Steam to launch exclusively on its own store has sparked a bit of a backlash in recent weeks, though Rami Ismail's view is simply that Valve is getting "out-businessed."

Related: many PC games are exclusive to Epic

Cheaper games would be a far less objectionable advantage, though it's by no means certain that developers will actually do as Sweeney predicts: we might see some fluctuation among indie pricing, but $60 has been established as the price point for triple-A games for ages now.

YouTube Thumbnail

Personally, I'm a little sceptical that major publishers will drop prices that have been A Thing since before digital distribution was, but only time will tell.