Fortnite is poised to return to the iOS App Store in the United States next week, marking a significant moment in the ongoing standoff between Epic Games and Apple. Tim Sweeney, CEO of Epic Games, confirmed the company’s intent to resubmit the popular title for iPhone and iPad users, contingent on the terms allowed by a recent court ruling that challenges Apple’s control over app distribution and in-app purchases.
Sweeney described the move as part of a broader offer to end the multi-year legal battle that began in 2020. Epic’s condition for fully reinstating Fortnite worldwide is simple: Apple must adopt the same regulatory framework globally that was mandated by the U.S. courts—specifically, a system where Epic can steer users toward external payment platforms without facing Apple’s standard commission fees, which typically range from 15 to 30 percent.
Under this model, Fortnite would not process V-bucks transactions directly within the iOS app. Instead, users would be directed to Epic’s website to make purchases, bypassing Apple’s in-app payment system entirely. This setup would eliminate Apple’s cut from those sales, a sticking point that initially triggered the game’s removal from the App Store nearly five years ago.
Despite its removal, Fortnite has remained accessible through alternative methods like Nvidia GeForce Now and Xbox Cloud Gaming, though those browser-based options haven’t matched the user experience of a native app. Epic’s willingness to drop all existing and future litigation hinges on Apple extending the U.S. court’s decision to all countries where it operates the App Store.
Apple has yet to respond publicly to Sweeney’s proposal, but the broader implications could be significant. Should Apple agree, it would set a precedent for app developers globally to sidestep the company’s payment infrastructure. That would represent a fundamental shift in how digital transactions are handled on one of the world’s most lucrative app platforms.
For now, Fortnite’s return to iOS is limited to the U.S.—pending Apple’s response to Epic’s wider demand. Whether this signals the beginning of a truce or simply another chapter in a long-running dispute remains to be seen.