Epic Games Loves Microsoft After All
The CEO of Epic Games, until recently one of the biggest critics of Microsoft, changed his mind about the Redmond Giant. According to a recent interview, Tim Sweeney has become an avid fan of the company that created Windows and Xbox.

Less than three years ago, Tim Sweeney, the CEO of Epic Games, was an ardent critic of Microsoft. He claimed that the Redmond Giant wanted to eliminate Steam and make the PC a closed platform. It seems like he doesn't think so anymore. In an interview for GamesBeat from a few days ago, he openly itted that his company "loves Microsoft:
"Epic is thrilled with everything Microsoft is doing and we feel that we couldn’t be happier with the directions they’ve taken on all their platforms. There’s HoloLens, now an open platform. There’s Windows, a completely open platform. And Microsoft is launching new Microsoft services of all sorts through the Windows Store. And then there’s also Microsoft Game . And those are existing side by side with everybody else’s services. And it’s a really healthy ecosystem, which everybody participates in.
And then there is Xbox. Consoles are a unique thing. They are television-attached gaming devices, as opposed to like general computing platforms. You’re not doing spreadsheets there. And so it was a different experience and also generally consoles over their history are subsidized hardware and so the hardware recoup some money from software sales. Epic is completely satisfied that their economic models are fair.
If a bunch of developers get together and decided to make a console, we would probably do something similar. Funding hardware through software is completely sensible plan. Epic loves Microsoft.
The fact that the head of Epic Games no longer considers Microsoft to be the biggest enemy of gamers was demonstrated in February this year at Mobile World Congress 2019 in Barcelona. Tim Sweeney appeared on stage during the presentation of Microsoft HoloLens 2 goggles to inform about the compatibility of the new hardware with Unreal Engine 4.
- FTC appeal of Microsoft's Activision Blizzard acquisition is rejected
- Nearly two hundred Overwatch 2 developers have unionized
- When Bill Gates and Warren Buffett were asked to sum up their success in just one word, they both gave the exact same answer
- Microsoft is once again laying off in a big way. Company announced biggest cuts since two years ago
- Fortnite's use of AI Darth Vader could have lasting implications for the industry