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Epic Spent $1 Billion On PC Exclusives By 2019

As the trawl through Epic’s court documents continues, another figure jumps out: $1 billion—the amount Epic had spent on securing exclusives by 2019.

The Week In Games: Lightfall Dynasty

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Spread across 110 titles, the detail is hidden within a document exploring “revenue assumptions”. In this, while guessing at potential income, they state that for 2019 titles they’d spent $542m, for 2020 $444m, and they’d already signed up $52m-worth for 2021. (Although that last figure could be on just one title, given how much these deals can be worth.)

Obviously, these are 2019 figures, so they don’t reflect how much has been spent on deals since. But it demonstrates just how much money Epic is willing to throw at the Epic Game Store in its efforts to dethrone Steam.

Exploring the documents—tantalizingly marked, “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL – ATTORNEYS’ EYES ONLY”—there emerges two imagined pathways into the Epic Game Store’s future. One an “aggressive pursuit scenario”, the other a “winding down scenario”, possibly suggesting the megacorp considered that the whole experiment might fail.

In its optimistic predictions, Epic aimed for 50 percent of the PC market, although that was contingent on “if Steam doesn’t react”. Presumably, that meant in the sense of whether Valve attempted to mimic the strategy of paying for exclusives and the like, which of course it has not. If it did react, Epic saw its chances at around 35 percent. In the Winding Down Model, Epic saw its share peaking at 20 percent and then falling to around 8 percent. It’d be fascinating to find out where it really is in 2021 since neither scenario seems at all likely – I’d be surprised if Epic managed that 8 percent yet—perhaps such details could come out in the current court-based cage match.

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