After Fortnite stumbles and layoffs, Epic bets on a Disney extraction shooter

Skye Jacobs

Posts: 2,029   +59
Staff
Rumor mill: Epic Games is trying to engineer a turnaround on two fronts at once: cutting costs after a sharp drop in Fortnite engagement while betting that a slate of Disney projects can restore its momentum. At the center of that strategy is a reported Disney-themed extraction shooter, the first in a planned run of new titles that insiders say will help determine whether the company can recover from recent misfires and layoffs.

Last month, Epic Games laid off about 1,000 employees as part of a $500 million cost-saving push, following the poor performance of several new games and Fortnite updates. On April 16, Epic will shut down Fortnite's Ballistic mode and Fortnite Festival Battle Stage. Rocket Racing will follow in October.

"Despite Fortnite remaining one of the most successful games in the world, we've had challenges delivering consistent Fortnite magic with every season," founder and chief executive officer Tim Sweeney said in a blog post announcing the cuts. He added that the company will look for ways to deliver "fresh seasonal content, gameplay, story, and live events."

Amid that retrenchment, Epic is leaning on its partnership with Walt Disney, which agreed to invest $1.5 billion in the firm two years ago. Conversations Bloomberg had with four current and former Epic employees indicate the company plans to use that deal to build a new game featuring Disney characters in an extraction-shooter format similar to Embark Studios' Arc Raiders, in which players battle enemies to reach an extraction point.

According to those people, Epic is targeting a November 2026 launch, though internal reviewers have warned that the gameplay loop and mechanics are "not very original," even as some staff members remain hopeful they can be improved before release.

The deal is expected to yield at least two more games, though early versions of the second title drew middling internal reviews, and resources for a third were shifted after reports that Disney was unhappy with Epic's release timeline.

Inside Epic, the pressure is high. The company has been regarded as one of the most respected operators in video games since Fortnite exploded into a global phenomenon in 2017, earning $9 billion in its first two years and helping drive a valuation that reached $32 billion in 2022.

More recently, employees told Bloomberg that Epic pushed out new products and Fortnite modes on compressed schedules, often in what some staffers called "Version 0.5" form, and that several high-profile initiatives – from its mobile store to user-generated content tools – fell short of internal expectations. Sweeney acknowledged that Epic had struggled to consistently deliver the Fortnite experience players expect.

Epic executives say the Disney effort is broader than a single game launch. "Bloomberg's reporting is not reflective of the ambitions of the Disney collaboration," said Liz Markman, Epic's senior director of global communications. She said the company sees the Disney partnership as the foundation for a broader games-and-entertainment universe built around Disney properties.

Markman described Epic's development schedules as inherently aggressive and said the company has shifted many developers onto projects nearing release, while keeping smaller teams focused on earlier-stage prototypes that are further out.

For Epic, the Disney project is both a creative gamble and a test of whether its aggressive development culture can still produce hits in a more competitive, slower-growing market. The company's first Disney shooter is intended as a centerpiece of that strategy; whether it arrives on time and how it lands with players will help determine whether Epic can rediscover the "Fortnite magic" it is now openly chasing.

Permalink to story:

 
This sounds dumb, but so did making a cartoony kid version PUBG knockoff back in 2017, and we all know how that turned out.

Plus, is this going to be a Disney-Disney extraction shooter, or the other kind of Disney? I mean Disney owns Star Wars, and a Stars Wars based extraction shooter sounds like a reasonable idea to try.
 
This sounds dumb, but so did making a cartoony kid version PUBG knockoff back in 2017, and we all know how that turned out.

Plus, is this going to be a Disney-Disney extraction shooter, or the other kind of Disney? I mean Disney owns Star Wars, and a Stars Wars based extraction shooter sounds like a reasonable idea to try.
A Star Wars one could work really well. Massive derelict star ships, deactivated droideka booby traps, all sorts of artifacts, and a ton of exotic locations. It'd work well with horror themes too, imagine a map set in the destroyer from Death Troopers, or the droid factory from republic commando.

But if you throw all of the Mouse into it, it becomes just another corpo slop game, and we have a ton of those already.
 
No matter what it starts as, it will end up being an MTX riddled mess with no consistent design language or philosophy.

The little mermaid will be extracting people next to Darth Vader and Iron Man.
 
I’ve noticed fewer updates to the game lately, and recently many players seem extremely skilled. It feels like there may be more cheaters now—some players move so fast that I can’t even aim at them, especially during peak hours like weekends or weekday evenings after dinner. For a moment, I honestly thought I was playing a ranked match. I play Fortnite because I enjoy trolling and the casual vibe, but nowadays players rarely talk in chat anymore.
 
"earning $9 billion in its first two years and helping drive a valuation that reached $32 billion in 2022"

I don't understand these companies. How much money do they want to make? Where does all that money go? It seems no matter how much money a studio makes or how successful they are it's just never enough. Not only that, their profits have to increase by large amounts quarter after quarter forever. As soon as their profits stall or drop even a little they immediately panic and start laying off people by the thousands and start talking about restructuring, blah blah blah.

As far as Epic goes, I can tell you right now with great certainty that whatever rehashed Disney slop they squeeze out is going to be a disaster. It's going to be delayed, it's going to be buggy, it's going to be boring, etc. If they think Disney's tired IP is going to save them they're sorely mistaken.
 
Back