Skip to main content

Fortnite made over $9 billion in its first two years

That's too much money, in case you're wondering

The trial between Epic and Apple over app store practices is underway and previously private details of the Fortnite developer's business are spilling. We're not a business site and ordinarily I wouldn't care, but ooh, it's good goss isn't it. For example, we now know that Fortnite made over $9 billion in its first two years of release.

As reported by The Verge, a new financial document made public as part of the trial discloses that Fortnite made $5.4 billion (around £3.8 billion) in 2018, its year of release, and $3.7 billion in 2019. The document was prepared in 2020, but Tim Sweeney revealed in testimony that Epic made a further $5.1 billion in gross revenue in 2020.

Unsurprisingly, the Fortnite revenue far outstrips any other source for Epic. "Other games" - including Rocket League - made a combined $108 million in revenue in 2018 and 2019, while the Unreal Engine made $221 million. There are other sources of income, but nothing gets close.

Watch on YouTube

If you're wondering how Epic can afford to pump so much money into the Epic Games Store, this is how. The same court case has also led to disclosure of how much Epic spend to secure free games to giveaway on the store, for example, while last month court documents revealed they had spent $444 million to secure store exclusives. In both cases, the figures are a drop in the ocean versus the money Fortnite makes.

The trial between Epic and Apple relates to the rules around releasing products on Apple's app store. In brief terms, Epic want to give less of a cut of revenue to Apple, and want to be able to offer subscriptions, purchases and customer support to their players without having to go through Apple. Apple want: not that. The outcome of the three-week trial could have broadranging consequences for everything released on the app store and for digital stores more generally.

If anyone wants to put Sweeney on trial for how often he uses the word "metaverse", please do.

Read this next

Graham Smith avatar
Graham Smith: Rock Paper Shotgun's editorial leader, corporate dad, and breezy evening news writer.
View comments (24)
In this article

Fortnite

Android, iOS, PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S, PC, Mac, Nintendo Switch

Related topics

Rock Paper Shotgun is better when you sign in

Sign in and join us on our journey to discover strange and compelling PC games.

A line drawing of a cartoon planet with a smiley face, surrounded by a couple of stars and a ring.