Updated on Anime ArchivesFriday, May 16 at 3:15 p.m. ET:On Friday afternoon, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman(who has a history of getting inside scoops from Apple) reported that Apple denies blocking the Fortnite app from iOS devices in Europe. Further, Gurman reported that Apple asked Epic Games to resubmit the app for approval in the EU. We still haven't heard anything from Apple directly, and we'll continue to monitor the situation.
You can read our original story below.
Introducing Fortnite v. Apple, Part Infinity: App Approval Thunderdome.
In case you couldn't tell from the catchy title, the Epic Games v. Apple legal drama has been an ongoing drama in the tech world. And in the latest news, Epic Games reports that Apple has rejected Fortnite's attempted return to the App Store.
"Apple has blocked our Fortnite submission so we cannot release to the US App Store or to the Epic Games Store for iOS in the European Union," posted the official Fortniteaccount on X today. "Now, sadly, Fortnite on iOS will be offline worldwide until Apple unblocks it."
Mashable reached out to Apple to ask about the situation, and we'll update this article if we learn any new information.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.SEE ALSO: You can finally buy books in the Kindle app, thanks to a California judge
Exactly a week ago, Epic Games delighted gamers by announcing it had officially resubmitted Fortniteto the App Store. But after the latest rejection, Fortnite has become unavailable for all iOS users worldwide.
Previously, iOS gamers in the EU were at least able to download Fortnite, but now, even that is unavailable. On top of that, Fortnitecan't even be downloaded through a third-party app store in the European Union, for reasons that are unclear.
One possible explanation? We know that Epic Games resubmitted Fortnitefor approval in the United States using its European developer account. If the submission was rejected as Epic Games claims, that could have triggered a wider problem for the company. Epic Games may have also pulled the app from third-party stores itself.
Here in the United States, iOS gamers have been unable to download Fortniteon Apple devices for years, which is what kicked off the legal case in the first place. Here's the tl;dr version from Mashable's Alex Perry:
Fortnitehas been unavailable to play natively on iPhones since 2020 because of a still-ongoing legal dispute between Apple and developer Epic Games. The short version is that Apple likes to take a 30 percent commission on in-app purchases in iOS apps, and Epic didn't like that. One thing led to another, and now there's a bona fide antitrust case against Apple. That case recently resulted in the company being named in contempt of court, forcing the company to stop collecting fees from off-app purchases.
The return of Fortniteto the App Store has been a long time coming, but gamers will have to wait even longer to try and talk to Darth Vader in the game, at least on Apple devices.
On X, Epic Games founder and CEO Tim Sweeney suggested that Apple had "weaponized" the app review process, framing this as a free speech issue.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Topics Apple Fortnite
“What the Foucault?” and Other AfterBlack Friday unlocked phone deals: Apple, Samsung, moreHow to search Reddit comments within a postA DACA Poet Speaks OutSugimoto's Portraits Bring the Dead Back to LifeHulu's $1 Black Friday deal is backRaising a Glass to Fred Bass, the Strand’s Iconic OwnerHere for the Ride: Andre D. Wagner’s Subway PhotographsYvan Alagbé’s “Dyaa”How ChatGPT could be changing pokerThe Sultan, the Armenian, and the Gaslight MysterySonos is getting into headphones, report claimsJames Joyce’s Love Letters to Nora Barnacle, His “Dirty Little Fuckbird”Here for the Ride: Andre D. Wagner’s Subway PhotographsCorsets and Cotillions: An Evening with the Jane Austen SocietyShane Madej and Ryan Bergara tell us what's in their YouTube watch historyBest deals of the day March 2: M2 Mac mini, Amazon Halo Rise, LG CordZero A9 Kompressor, and moreHulu's $1 Black Friday deal is backWatching Screwball Comedies with Harry MathewsThe Hamburger: An American Lyric Rivers Solomon, Elisa Gonzalez, and Elaine Feeney Recommend by The Paris Review Faring by Saskia Hamilton Camus’s New York Diary, 1946 by Albert Camus Selling to the Strand: A Conversation with Larry Campbell by Troy Schipdam Making of a Poem: Timmy Straw on “Brezhnev” by Timmy Straw The Leap by Dan Beachy I Could Not Believe It: The 1979 Teenage Diaries of Sean DeLear by Sean DeLear and Brontez Purnell Does It Have to Be That Way?: A Conversation with Elif Batuman by Maria Dimitrova I Love Birds Most by Kate Riley A Place for Fire by Elisa Gabbert The Blackstairs Mountains by Colm Tóibín Bedbugs by Sophie Kemp My Boyfriend Nietzsche and a Boy Like a Baked Alaska by The Paris Review Gaddis/Markson: Two Letters by William Gaddis and David Markson Making of a Poem: Peter Mishler on “My Blockchain” by Peter Mishler My Royal Quiet Deluxe by Matthew Zapruder My Ugly Bathroom by Sarah Miller Love Songs: “I’m Your Man” by Laurie Stone A Room with History by Saidiya Hartman Porn by Polly Barton
3.0216s , 10132.484375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Anime Archives】,Warmth Information Network