Epic Games gets hit with a new lawsuit, this time over Fortnite's in-game store, adding to the company's ongoing legal battles.
T wo parents have launched a legal battle against Epic Games, the company behind Fortnite, accusing it of misleading kids with tricks in the game’s Item Shop. Filed on Wednesday
Epic Games Store users can also get the Anniversary Party Favor for World of Warships.
Epic Game Store's first free game of March 2025 is now available to download for all EGS users on PC for one week.
Parents have filed a proposed class-action lawsuit against Fortnite maker Epic Games for allegedly creating "the
First reported by Polygon, two parents in the US are suing Epic Games over limited-time sales of Fortnite skins and cosmetics that they argue aren't really limited time at all, creating a false sense of "FOMO"—a term actually used in the lawsuit—for Fortnite's younger players.
The first two Epic Games Store free games on mobile were Bloons TD 6 and Dungeon of the Endless: Apogee. Whereas the Epic Games Store free PC games are available on a week-to-week basis, the company's mobile offerings are instead free for one month at a time.
Epic Games has announced it is suing an individual from Illinois, named in its suit as one Isaac Strock, for allegedly stealing hundreds of Fortnite accounts which he then re-sold through Telegram.
If this complaint sounds familiar, that’s because it is: The Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets fined Epic Games €1,125,000 (roughly $1,200,000) in 2024 for its “misleading countdown timers” and other features that “exploited the vulnerabilities of children.”
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Fortnite and Unreal Engine maker Epic Games is suing a player, Isaac Strock, for allegedly stealing and selling “hundreds” of Fortnite accounts. Epic Games announced the lawsuit in an anti-cheat update on its website on Feb. 27, filed that day in an Illinois court.