Support us on Patreon to keep GamingOnLinux alive. This ensures all of our main content remains free for everyone. Just good, fresh content! Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal. You can also buy games using our partner links for GOG and Humble Store.
We do often include affiliate links to earn us some pennies. See more here.

Epic Games have announced their new Epic First Run program, to entice more developers to release on their store exclusively and give developers a boost. With this we can expect to see many more developers opt to go Epic exclusive.

The Epic First Run program will give developers 100% of the revenue, so Epic Games will not take a cut from sales on the Epic Games Store for the first 6 exclusive months. It's opt-in for developers and does not prevent them from selling it directly and selling it using keys via the likes of Green Man Gaming, Humble Store and other stores that sell keys. Naturally, this rules out Steam and GOG, which is largely the point of it to get more people to shop on the Epic Store and not Steam.

After the 6 month exclusive period is up, developers can then release elsewhere and the revenue split goes back to 88% for developers and 12% to Epic Games.

Epic also mention that they now have over 68 million monthly active users with over 230 million players. To help get word out, developers who opt into the Epic First Run program will get "new exclusive badging, homepage placements, and dedicated collections" along with features in "elevant store campaigns including sales, events, and editorial as applicable".

See Epic's announcement here.

What do you think to this news?

On Linux and Steam Deck, you can use the likes of the Heroic Games Launcher to really simplify getting games from Epic since they still do not officially support either with the Epic Store.

In related news Denuvo are rolling out some special protection for Unreal Engine games.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: Epic Games, Misc
6 Likes
About the author -
author picture
I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly checked on the progress of Linux until Ubuntu appeared on the scene and it helped me to really love it. You can reach me easily by emailing GamingOnLinux directly.
See more from me
The comments on this article are closed.
66 comments
Page: «5/7»
  Go to:

Arehandoro Aug 24, 2023
Yeah, no, thanks.
rustigsmed Aug 24, 2023
Dev's need to decide whether a slow start in sales due to lower exposure and smaller player base on EGS is worth it. It might look good to the bean counters in some companies but game release hype is a huge factor. you'd probably have to fork out more $ upfront for additional advertising of the game then hope it convinces players to use EGS. risky business. Are people going to be flocking to Alan Wake 2 on the EGS probably not - Control also released on EGS first not sure if it was 6 months or longer.
trev0r Aug 24, 2023
I mean, that's a pretty good deal. I still don't buy from Epic, but I can see why some devs would want to try this.
pleasereadthemanual Aug 24, 2023
Quoting: whizseI just claim them using the website.
It's the website I find to be a chore! Coming from Australia, the website takes a minute to load up and redirect. Once I get to the sign in screen, I need to fill out two screens of "Which of these is a dolphin?" hcaptcha to prove I'm a human. Then I go back to the incredibly slow website to claim the game, which is another 4 screens. Usually about 20 seconds or more between them. Oh, and now I need to click on the dog before I can claim it, twice.

This was my experience claiming the current free game on EGS 10 minutes ago. Heroic Launcher isn't any better, but at least the client is less heavy than the official client when you're trying to launch the game and has more useful features.

Additionally, I've looked and looked but I can't seem to find any way to view my library on the website. I see lots of poor design choices. Steam isn't great either but at least you can find what you're looking for fairly quickly and the website isn't glacial.

Quoting: whizseMost of the freebies I have been interested in have been free of DRM and doesn't require the client. I just exfiltrate them using legendary and run them with Wine/Proton as I see fit.
Oh, right! I didn't know that. I assumed they were encumbered by DRM as they don't give you an obvious way to extract the game files. That's a good thing!
yndoendo Aug 24, 2023
I still have not purchased any former Epic exclusive releases that are now on Steam. Outer Worlds looked good, yet no respect. None of their current exclusives are inciting. With their current state, chances of me using their service is 0. Those developers will get a full 100% of that 0.
ridge Aug 24, 2023
Honestly I would almost say I prefer Epic Games over Steam, because I can use the Legendary CLI program to install and launch my games. Once my games are installed, I can just make shortcuts that launch them through Legendary; quick, and directly to the game, no waiting on sign-ins, no heavy background clients making a billion cloud sync operations, other file verifications, and update checks, just launch and the game pops up.

This is in contrast to installing the entire [bleeping] Steam client and having to run it every time I want to play the one single game I need Steam to play. I tried ditching Steam long ago, but there's always some exclusive that forces you into Valve's ecosystem.

Ultimately, a Steam exclusive sucks as much as an Epic exclusive, because Epic's stance on Linux is abysmal and I don't like supporting them because of it; on the other hand, I hate feeding Valve's monopoly machine. Both of them means I won't be able to get it on GOG or directly from the developer (DRM free or not), at least for quite a while, or even ever. A sigh from me.


Last edited by ridge on 24 August 2023 at 3:23 pm UTC
whizse Aug 24, 2023
View PC info
  • Supporter
Quoting: pleasereadthemanualIt's the website I find to be a chore! Coming from Australia, the website takes a minute to load up and redirect. Once I get to the sign in screen, I need to fill out two screens of "Which of these is a dolphin?" hcaptcha to prove I'm a human. Then I go back to the incredibly slow website to claim the game, which is another 4 screens. Usually about 20 seconds or more between them. Oh, and now I need to click on the dog before I can claim it, twice.
Ouch! Sound like your experience with the site is on par with my experience with the client. I can only assume they are now running Denuvo with Emscripten on the storefront.

Quoting: pleasereadthemanualOh, right! I didn't know that. I assumed they were encumbered by DRM as they don't give you an obvious way to extract the game files. That's a good thing!
There's sometimes some magic launch parameters needed. Usually involving -EpicPortal It does differ between games, but is documented on pcgamingwiki.
Klaas Aug 24, 2023
Quoting: pleasereadthemanualI struggle to find a single positive thing to say about EGS
It seems that Sweeney isn't a murderer although he is named like one. There's your positive thing.
TheRiddick Aug 25, 2023
The EPIC API works fine from what I can see under Linux with apps that utilized it, BUT it would be very nice if EGS released their store app launcher for Linux and offered actual Linux branches for developers to use, and perhaps a inhouse baked proton like running, or just detect whatever the user dumps into a runner folder or something for the windows games.

I don't believe its hard to do considering several open-source projects have done these things already and often its work done by tiny teams on casual basis!

They should also bring community features including a modding support in their app.


Last edited by TheRiddick on 25 August 2023 at 5:14 am UTC
Zlopez Aug 25, 2023
  • Supporter Plus
Quoting: ridgeUltimately, a Steam exclusive sucks as much as an Epic exclusive.

I never heard about Steam doing exclusives, it's on developer/distributor to decide where they want to sell. In case of Epic they are forcing the developers/distributors to not sell anywhere else.
While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:

Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.

This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!

You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
The comments on this article are closed.