I'm a gamer. I grew up in and around one of the best cities anywhere, Austin, Tx. Head down if you like live music or games!
139754 stories
·
8 followers

Yellowjackets Star Ella Purnell Tried To Change One Major Thing About Jackie Taylor

1 Share
A key character's fate was never as flexible as it seemed. Ella Purnell's behind-the-scenes push reveals how firmly Yellowjackets stuck to its plan.



Read the whole story
Jagmas
43 minutes ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

It's Official: House Of The Dragon To End With Season 4, HBO Confirms

1 Share
Any lingering uncertainty about House of the Dragon's future has been cleared up: The HBO series will end with Season 4.



Read the whole story
Jagmas
44 minutes ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

Elon Musk Emailed With Jeffrey Epstein to Plan Island Visits in 2012 and 2014

1 Share
Epstein wrote an email to Musk in 2013 discussing a visit with four "assistants," newly released DOJ documents show.

Read the whole story
Jagmas
45 minutes ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

Counting half a million players, Eterspire dev teases interactive combat, class mobility, and guilds

1 Share
A few weeks back, we reported on the wild news that Eterspire, our own indie MMORPG of 2025, had surpassed 500,000 registered players. Now, Stonehollow Workshop lead dev Manu has posted a lengthy dev blog on Reddit to explain how it went from zero to hero. Well, from one guy to an indie darling. “Believe […]
Read the whole story
Jagmas
46 minutes ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

Epic Games boss Tim Sweeney voices support for $900 million Steam lawsuit: 'Valve is the only major store still holding onto the payments tie and 30% junk fee'

1 Share

Unsurprisingly, Epic Games CEO and frequent X poster Tim Sweeney has thoughts about the $900 million lawsuit against Valve in the UK, which recently got the go-ahead from a competition tribunal. Also unsurprisingly, given his competing store and past criticism of Steam, Sweeney approves of the action, and based on his related legal tussles with Apple and Google, thinks there's something to it.

The lawsuit, filed in 2024, very broadly alleges that Valve unfairly prevents game makers from offering their products at lower prices on other platforms and requires that all add-on content for games purchased on Steam also be purchased through Steam, and that Valve's "excessive commission" has resulted in inflated prices for UK consumers. Valve had argued that the suit should not be allowed to proceed as a collective action—functionally similar to a class action—but a Competition Appeal Tribunal disagreed, ruling earlier this week that the suit can proceed.

Sweeney has homed in on the DLC issue specifically. Although developers can sell DLC on other platforms and have it carry over to a user's Steam copy, Valve doesn't allow them to sell add-ons directly through in-game stores or to use their in-game UI to steer users to off-platform stores. This, Sweeney says, is "like a car dealership demanding 30% of gas purchases," and is one of the things he and Epic have successfully fought Apple and Google over.

Sweeney's comments naturally led to a flurry of dissenting responses, but he resolutely stood his ground: "Today, in the USA, developers are free to steer users of iOS and Android apps to competing purchase methods. Apple and Google collect 0% on those transactions. On computers and smartphones, Valve is the only major store still holding onto the payments tie and 30% junk fee."

The Epic CEO acknowledged in multiple replies that Steam keys or DLC can be purchased from other platforms, but has reiterated that the problem is that "developers can't offer alternative purchase options to customers IN-GAME" while following Valve's rules. It's a complaint that's effectively identical to the one at the core of Epic's legal wars against Apple and Google.

(Image credit: Tim Sweeney (Twitter))

Epic is not directly involved with the lawsuit, but combatting Steam's 30% fee and prohibition on steering users to off-platform purchase methods for add-ons was one of the founding goals of the Epic Games Store. In 2019, Sweeney went so far as to say that if Steam dropped its fee to 12%, he would stop pursuing Epic Games Store exclusives and even consider putting Fortnite on the platform.

Meanwhile, Epic has demonstrated a willingness to spend enormous amounts of money pursuing the principle against some of the biggest tech companies on the planet. Calling Steam's 30% cut a "junk fee" is maybe a little much, but I also don't think there's any doubt that the industry is slowly trending away from it—led, in part, by Epic's efforts.

Steam has managed to maintain its big cut and restrictive policies because it has such a dominant position in the market—being first sometimes really is best—but if this lawsuit in the UK (and a similar action slowly unfolding in the US) go badly for Valve, it may be forced to dial things back drastically. I'm sure Sweeney will have some choice thoughts on that if it happens, too.

Steam sale dates: When's the next event?
Epic Store free games: What's free right now?
Free PC games: The best freebies you can grab
2025 games: This year's upcoming releases
Free Steam games: No purchase necessary



Read the whole story
Jagmas
1 hour ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

Blumhouse-Atomic Monster Developing Hannah Rose May Comic Book Series ‘The Exorcism At 1600 Penn’ For Film

1 Share
EXCLUSIVE: Blumhouse-Atomic Monster is developing a feature adaptation of The Exorcism at 1600 Penn, the comic book series created and written by Hannah Rose May. An IDW Publishing original, The Exorcism at 1600 Penn is a supernatural thriller set at the most famous address in the United States as it becomes a demonic battleground for […]

Read the whole story
Jagmas
2 hours ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories