Fortnite isn’t the future, it’s an anomaly, and Tim Sweeney is just another CEO wrongly predicting the death of big singleplayer games

Fortnite jacked Peter Griffin

Epic boss Tim Sweeney reckons we’re in the midst of a “generational change” in the videogame industry—one that’s going to see games like Fortnite stick their flag on top of a pile of (largely singleplayer) blockbuster corpses. But all he’s doing is repeating a fallacy that has been touted for years, with little evidence to back it up. The metaverse ain’t the future and singleplayer games will never stop coming. 

“One of the manifestations [of that change] we’re seeing right now is that a lot of games are released with high budgets, and they’re not selling nearly as well as expected,” Sweeney said. “Whereas other games are going incredibly strong. What we’re seeing is a real trend where players are gravitating toward the really big games where they can play with more of their friends.”

(Image credit: Epic Games)

Now, to be fair to Sweeney, the picture he paints of the current state of the industry is not entirely inaccurate. We’ve witnessed a slew of high-profile flops and disappointments over the last year, most recently the actually-quite-good Star Wars Outlaws. And there’s no denying that Fortnite is a gargantuan powerhouse which, along with the likes of Roblox, demonstrates the popularity of not just multiplayer games, but social platforms. 

It’s impossible to say “This is what gamers want”.



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