Monday, January 28th 2019
Metro Exodus Ditches Steam for Epic Games Store as Timed Exclusive
Metro Exodus is an upcoming post-apocalyptic first-person shooter that could be a trilogy finale. Just weeks ahead of its launch on the PC platform, 4A Games made a groundbreaking announcement: that the game will not be available to order on Steam, at least from tomorrow through Feb 14, 2020, and that its PC version will be an Epic Games Store timed exclusive. The game will launch at USD $49.99 in North America, and 59.95€ in the EU.
Pre-order sales of the game have stopped on Steam, however, those who bought the pre-order on Steam have the option of either receiving the game upon launch, or canceling their pre-order for a full refund. Those who choose to stick to Steam will get their game as usual, including update patches, and support on Steam Community. Epic Games Store is vacuuming game studios in droves due to a favorable revenue sharing deal compared to Steam, when lets developers keep 88 percent of the sales.
Source:
Polygon
Pre-order sales of the game have stopped on Steam, however, those who bought the pre-order on Steam have the option of either receiving the game upon launch, or canceling their pre-order for a full refund. Those who choose to stick to Steam will get their game as usual, including update patches, and support on Steam Community. Epic Games Store is vacuuming game studios in droves due to a favorable revenue sharing deal compared to Steam, when lets developers keep 88 percent of the sales.
153 Comments on Metro Exodus Ditches Steam for Epic Games Store as Timed Exclusive
Marketing 9000+.
I'll see myself out.
Why cant we just pick the game up from any platform that could run it. I mean I know it would be weird if it was open to EA (Origin) but Steam is level playing, or should be.
I wish I would have preordered, I don't ever but if I would have known this I would have just so all Metro games were on Steam.
As a side note a company called Tencent Holdings Limited owns 48% of Epic games. It is a Chinese company and is the largest gaming company in the world. They also handle the majority of money transactions for gaming in China. not sure how that shakes out with Epic.
I just got it on Steam.
I'm hoping that all of this is going to push Valve to be more price competitive for developers. Valve are not wanting for money but the question is where does the loss of revenue from game sales on other stores overtake the loss of revenue they'd get by lowering their fee for all games on steam.
At least they will fulfill their obligations for steam pre-orders.
The only way I will switch to Epic Store, is if they get at least half as many games as Valve. So far, having Division 2 and Metro Exodus under the belt can hardly be a reason for me (or anyone else) to even download the installer. There's like 2 dozen games, third of which isn't even out yet, third of which are free, and another third is small indie crap, that Epic will give away for free until there's nothing to give away. That's good to know. I wasn't aware of that, but it makes sense now (Tencent OP making indirect move on western market).
It looks like people on here love the Steam monopoly.
As per this article. www.rockpapershotgun.com/2019/01/28/metro-exodus-becomes-epic-games-store-exclusive/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+rockpapershotgun%2Fsteam+%28Rock%2C+Paper%2C+Shotgun%3A+Steam+RSS%29
"Will Metro Exodus ever return to Steam?
Yes - Metro Exodus will return to Steam and on other store fronts after 14th February 2020."
Also, I believe some if not all Epic contracts lately state, "if x game does not sell x amount of copies in x amount of time, we will refund you the difference" so its a no risk situation.
that fortnite money is unstoppable baby. and quite frankly steam's 30% margin shares are outdated, it made sense when box game sales were taking 60% margin shares and steam undercut them... now its all digital and steam has someone undercutting them. this is good for everyone imo, this will eventually force gabes hand - and companies will get more money in their pocket allowing them to make more games or hire more people for better quality games, alternatively, companies can sell games on steam and epic games and just pro-rate the price, if you want to pay $10 to steam for the community then do it, but if you want to pay less then buy it off epicgames. i suppose that is also a fair idea. would be interesting to see who would win, indie games would prob win on epic, AAA still on steam, but who knows.
GOG so far has 1,203 people signed into the community wishlist for Exodus.