HomeNews
Epic open fire on Apple with a Fortnite propaganda reelExactly as Orwell predicted.
Exactly as Orwell predicted.

The latest show to hitFortnite’s Party Island isn’t a blow-out concert or Chris Nolan flick. Somehow, it’s weirder. Hop in front of Fortnite’s big telly right now and you’ll find a call to “#FreeFortnite” from the supposed tyranny of tech giant Apple, who today removed the battle royale from the App Store for sidestepping its revenue policies. Now, Epic are taking Apple to court - and they’ve got an in-game ad campaign to make sure public perception is on their side.
The irony of twisting Apple’soriginal Orwellian attack on Microsoftshouldn’t be lost here.
To see this content please enable targeting cookies.Manage cookie settings
It’s a meticulous attack, I’ll give them that. After brazenly offering a “don’t give Apple money” button on Fortnite’s iOS client, Apple predictably booted the game from the App Store. This played right into Epic’s hand, with the pubs immediately firing off a lawsuit and, more bizarrely, an in-game ad campaign for their lawsuit captioned “Nineteen Eighty-Fortnite” (get it?). They had this entire animated, voice acted, edited and ready to go for a backlash that may not have even occurred.
Mind, there’s something rather gross about rallying your massive, overwhelmingly young fanbase in service of what is ostensibly a revenue dispute between two billion-dollar tech companies. Even if there are very real problems with the App Store when it comes to what games are and aren’t allowed on the platform and how they’re allowed to monetise, it’s too easy to see this kind of power pushed in dangerous directions.
Epic’s plan appears to be an attempt to open Apple’s “monopoly” on App Store payments to antitrust legislation. Their particular beef with Apple is twofold - not only is this an extension of Sweeney’slong crusade against 30% store cuts, but Epic also criticise Apple’s rules against hosting a third-party storefront on the App Store, a ruling that’s kept them from bringing the Epic Games Store to iOS.
Regardless, the ball is now in Apple’s court. Epic isn’t demanding financial compensation, instead asking the court tear down Apple’s “anti-competitive restrictions on the iOS ecosystem”, and to “ensure that Apple mobile devices are open to the same competition as Apple’s personal computers” (viaGamasutra).
Whatever happens next, it sure as hell didn’t show up inOrwell’s copy of 1984.