Abso-fucking-lutely not. That’ll be the death of epic and unreal engine as we know it if it ever happened. And why team up with Google if you know they’ll abandon it in 2-3 years?
Games
Welcome to the largest gaming community on Lemmy! Discussion for all kinds of games. Video games, tabletop games, card games etc.
Weekly Threads:
Rules:
-
Submissions have to be related to games
-
No bigotry or harassment, be civil
-
No excessive self-promotion
-
Stay on-topic; no memes, funny videos, giveaways, reposts, or low-effort posts
-
Mark Spoilers and NSFW
-
No linking to piracy
More information about the community rules can be found here.
That'll be the death of epic
Don't threaten me with a good time
The loss of unreal would be rough for the industry. We’d be better off without Epic, but not without unreal
I really enjoyed THE FINALS, but I don't play much games with unreal engine so I can see a future without Epic Games
Pretty much the majority of (large) single player games in development or recently released have been unreal properties. It’s by far the best game engine for its use cases
This is it. Most games beyond small scope/indie projects start in Unreal.
Unreal or Unity, and one of those recently became not really an option.
I think it’s in everyone’s interest to have more variety in engine choice, but that just leads to everyone only being familiar with their proprietary engine implementation.
Godot is trying to break in, and seems to be picking up some steam though
Epic does a lot good things that aren't competing with the de facto monopoly on pc game sales.
But Tencent is worse.
Just let us play with our balls in peace! :(
~ rocket league players
Yeah first thing they probably do is end the free games and without it I wouldn't have any games on Epic nor use the platform. It would suck.
They will abandon stock for Tencent. Easy 100% of stocks speedrun
In case anyone didn't read the article, this was all the way back in 2018. They're not buying Epic any time soon, relax.
Also they discussed approaching Tencent internally, they didn't actually make plans with them. The title sort of implies they were both in talks.
I can tell folks here didn't read the article. These talks were in 2018, when Stadia was still a thing.
Wonder what the point of sharing this article is
The Epic v Google lawsuit is bringing to light a lot of interesting tidbits of info, so I think it's just that. It's an interesting tidbit, but not really relevant to much outside the trial. That said, I do like seeing this kind of info shared, as it gives us a peek behind the curtain of these megacorps' operations.
Baiting the anti-Epic crowd.
Had to check to see if Stadia even existed in 2018 (it did), because it's totally plausible for it to have come and gone in less time
Great evil + great evil + smaller evil = ?
Profit!
Absolute Evil.
AWW HELL NAH. 😤 This bettah not happen.
Why is everyone buying each other lately???
Weakening of antitrust regulations.
Nobody is stopping them
Lately? You haven't been paying attention.
Corporations see others getting profit as competition, and it makes sense to consolidate profits so "Everyone wins" (everyone excluding the consumer)
One school of thoughts is companies go through eras of profiting from inflation and eras of profiting from M&As. Guess an uptick in M&A would suggest they're no longer increasing profits from inflation?