This past summer, Epic Games started a huge stir when they violated the Apple Store’s terms of service. They implemented a way to bypass Apple’s shopping interface and allowed Fortnite players to purchase in-game items and battle passes through the game itself. Apple then fired back by removing Fortnite from their app store after it
Samsung
Samsung seems to be gearing up to brand their devices for core gaming as the streaming wars begin to heat up and Epic begins to declare war on Apple with Fortnite. The past two weeks have been proof that mobile gaming isn’t just for Candy Crush and Angry Birds and with Microsoft and Epic games making
Xbox Game Pass Ultimate with its xCloud game streaming will not be heading to the iOS app store, leaving many iPhone-carrying Xbox players out in the cold. According to Statista, in the US alone, over 45% of smartphone owners are using an iteration of Apple’s iPhone. At almost 50% market share, chances are that just
Microsoft and Xbox have been pushing hard to bring in new players to their ecosystem recently. From bringing Game Pass to the cloud with xCloud in September to supporting their competitors’ controllers on xCloud, it would be an understatement to say that Microsoft’s gaming division is making moves. And now, in their latest push, Microsoft