Personally, as a customer, not a developer, this is disappointing to me, as there's still no reason for me to shop on Epic when they don't support my operating system, so this is likely just going to entice more developers to make me wait 6 months to play their games. Nonetheless, it's gaming news.
Steam started losing business to Epic and revised the terms of their revenue split. Competition is far behind in more ways than one: this deal is good for people selling games, but they're not offering me reasons to buy from them. Going all the way back to traditional retail, if there were exclusives at Best Buy, Gamestop, and EB Games, I'd buy the game from just about anywhere else, because I hate the practice. A carrot works better than a stick, IMO. They've got Epic Online Services providing much-needed third party cross play services, which is great. They could start making generic, open standards for other things that Valve has incentivized for tying games to their platform and that would work better than making me wait 6 months to play a game on Steam, where I've got a plethora of features that I use and enjoy.
Steam started losing business to Epic and revised the terms of their revenue split. Competition is far behind in more ways than one: this deal is good for people selling games, but they're not offering me reasons to buy from them. Going all the way back to traditional retail, if there were exclusives at Best Buy, Gamestop, and EB Games, I'd buy the game from just about anywhere else, because I hate the practice. A carrot works better than a stick, IMO. They've got Epic Online Services providing much-needed third party cross play services, which is great. They could start making generic, open standards for other things that Valve has incentivized for tying games to their platform and that would work better than making me wait 6 months to play a game on Steam, where I've got a plethora of features that I use and enjoy.