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Fortnite is finally back on US iPhones

  • theverge.com language
  • 2025-05-21 05:15 event
  • 4 days ago schedule
Fortnite is once again available on the iOS App Store in the US, according to Epic Games. You can get it from the App Store here. Epic says it has returned to the Epic Games Store and AltStore as well. Apple kicked Fortnite off the App Store nearly five years ago after Epic Games added […]

Fortnite is once again available on the iOS App Store in the US, according to Epic Games. You can get it from the App Store here. Epic says it has returned to the Epic Games Store and AltStore as well.

Apple kicked Fortnite off the App Store nearly five years ago after Epic Games added its own in-app payment system to the game, which violated Apple’s rules. But after a major court ruling in Epic Games v. Apple that forced Apple to not take fees from purchases made outside of apps, the game is available to play on US iPhones once again.

Shortly after the big ruling hit, CEO Tim Sweeney said that Epic planned to bring back Fortnite to iOS in the US. He also made a “peace proposal:” “If Apple extends the court’s friction-free, Apple-tax-free framework worldwide, we’ll return Fortnite to the App Store worldwide and drop current and future litigation on the topic.“

On May 9th, it submitted the app to Apple. Ahead of that, Sweeney said that Epic would use its Sweden developer account to submit the game to the US App Store.

Late last week, Epic said that Apple had blocked Fortnite’s return to the App Store, and the game also became unavailable on other alternative app stores in the EU. However, Apple said that it had “asked that Epic Sweden resubmit the app update without including the US storefront of the App Store so as not to impact Fortnite in other geographies” and that “we did not take any action to remove the live version of Fortnite from alternative distribution marketplaces.”

Epic asked the judge in the Epic v. Apple case to order Apple to review its Fortnite submission on May 16th. Yesterday, the judge said in a filing that Apple is “fully capable of resolving this issue without further briefing or a hearing,” and that if a resolution wasn’t reached, the Apple official who “is personally responsible for ensuring compliance” would have to appear at a hearing next Tuesday.

However, shortly after Fortnite returned to the App Store on Tuesday, Epic and Apple filed a joint notice saying that they have “resolved all issues” from Epic’s May 16th filing. Apple didn’t immediately reply to a request for comment.

Epic also recently rolled out a new promotion to encourage players to use its payment systems: if you use Epic’s system in Fortnite, Rocket League, or Fall Guys on PC, iOS, Android, and the web, the company will give you 20 percent back in Epic Rewards that can be used for other purchases in its games or on the Epic Games Store.

In the iOS version of Fortnite that was released on Tuesday, the app shows you that 20 percent bonus when you pick which payment system you want to use to buy V-Bucks.

The company launched a new Star Wars-themed season for Fortnite on May 2nd.

If you get the app from the App Store, it will be a small initial download, and after you actually open the app, it will download the rest of the game. For a colleague, that additional download was 12.95GB.

Update, May 20th: Added details of Epic and Apple’s joint notice.

49. Windows 95 chime composer Brian Eno denounces Microsoft for its ties to Israeli government

  • 3 days ago schedule
  • theverge.com language

Artist and musician Brian Eno — who also composed the iconic Windows 95 operating system startup chime — called on Microsoft today to “suspend all services that support any operations that contribute to violations of international law,” saying the company plays a role in “surveillance, violence, and destruction in Palestine.” It’s the latest high-profile instance […]

50. Scientists figure out how the brain forms emotional connections

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  • arstechnica.com language

Neural recordings track how neurons link environments to emotional events.

51. Microsoft blames Apple for its delayed Xbox mobile store

  • 3 days ago schedule
  • theverge.com language

A year ago Xbox president Sarah Bond revealed that Microsoft was planning to launch a new Xbox mobile web store in July 2024. That never happened. I’ve been wondering what the hold up has been over the past year, and it seems we might have an answer: Apple. Microsoft filed an amicus brief late on […]

52. Miniot returns with a sleeker Wheel 3 vertical turntable

  • 3 days ago schedule
  • theverge.com language

The original Wheel vertical turntable was a bust, the Wheel 2 redemption, and now the small mom and pop team at Miniot is back for a victory lap with the Wheel 3. It can play your record collection upright on its stand, laid flat on a table, or hung on a wall.  Inside the handmade […]

53. Amazon is sending customers refunds for some really, really old returns

  • 3 days ago schedule
  • theverge.com language

Amazon is issuing refunds to customers who’d returned products but never received their money back, in some cases from as long ago as 2018.  “Following a recent internal review, we identified a very small subset of returns that were unresolved because we could not verify that the correct item had been sent back to us,” […]

54. Microsoft’s AI security chief accidentally reveals Walmart’s AI plans after protest

  • 3 days ago schedule
  • theverge.com language

Microsoft’s head of security for AI, Neta Haiby, accidentally revealed confidential messages about Walmart’s use of Microsoft’s AI tools during a Build talk that was disrupted by protesters.  The Build livestream was muted and the camera pointed down, but the session resumed moments later after the protesters were escorted out. In the aftermath, Haiby then […]

55. Volvo will be the first to install Google’s Gemini in its cars

  • 3 days ago schedule
  • theverge.com language

At yesterday’s I/O conference, Google announced plans to start putting its AI chatbot, Gemini, in a variety of different places, including cars. Today, Volvo said it was shoving its way to the front of the line to be the first to receive the new tech. Volvo said it was expanding its preexisting partnership with Google […]

56. AMD’s $299 Radeon RX 9060 XT brings 8GB or 16GB of RAM to fight the RTX 5060

  • 3 days ago schedule
  • arstechnica.com language

New midrange RDNA 4 GPUs launch starting on June 5, just weeks after RTX 5060.

57. AMD’s new RX 9060 XT looks set to challenge Nvidia’s RTX 5060 GPUs

  • 3 days ago schedule
  • theverge.com language

AMD is officially announcing its Radeon RX 9060 XT GPU at Computex today. Like the number implies, this graphics card will challenge Nvidia’s recently released RTX 5060 and RTX 5060 Ti, with AMD offering models with 8GB or 16GB of VRAM. AMD is launching both models on June 5th, with the 8GB variant priced at […]

58. Fortnite is finally back on US iPhones

  • 4 days ago schedule
  • theverge.com language

Fortnite is once again available on the iOS App Store in the US, according to Epic Games. You can get it from the App Store here. Epic says it has returned to the Epic Games Store and AltStore as well. Apple kicked Fortnite off the App Store nearly five years ago after Epic Games added […]

59. Chicago Sun-Times publishes made-up books and fake experts in AI debacle

  • 4 days ago schedule
  • theverge.com language

The May 18th issue of the Chicago Sun-Times features dozens of pages of recommended summer activities: new trends, outdoor activities, and books to read. But some of the recommendations point to fake, AI-generated books, and other articles quote and cite people that don’t appear to exist. Alongside actual books like Call Me By Your Name […]

60. How 3D printing is personalizing health care

  • 4 days ago schedule
  • arstechnica.com language

Prosthetics are becoming increasing affordable and accessible thanks to 3D printers.

61. Google’s Gemini AI is coming to Chrome

  • 4 days ago schedule
  • theverge.com language

Google is adding its Gemini AI assistant to Chrome, the company announced at Google I/O on Tuesday.  Initially, Gemini will be able to “clarify complex information on any webpage you’re reading or summarize information,” according to a blog post from Google Labs and Gemini VP Josh Woodward. Google envisions that Gemini in Chrome will later […]

62. We tried on Google’s prototype AI smart glasses

  • 4 days ago schedule
  • theverge.com language

Here in sunny Mountain View, California, I am sequestered in a teeny-tiny box. Outside, there's a long line of tech journalists, and we are all here for one thing: to try out Project Moohan and Google's Android XR smart glasses prototypes. (The Project Mariner booth is maybe 10 feet away and remarkably empty.) While nothing […]

63. Self-hosting is having a moment. Ethan Sholly knows why.

  • 4 days ago schedule
  • arstechnica.com language

We interview Ethan Sholly of the selfh.st podcast/newsleter/directory.

64. Google starts beta testing Android 16’s youthful new look

  • 4 days ago schedule
  • theverge.com language

Google has announced it’s rolling out the colorful new Android 16 interface for beta testers as reported by 9to5Google. The QPR1 beta includes the company’s Material 3 Expressive design language revealed officially last week and includes new visuals for the launcher, notifications, lock screen, and a very Apple-inspired quick settings page. QPRs, or quarterly platform […]

65. Gemini 2.5 is leaving preview just in time for Google’s new $250 AI subscription

  • 4 days ago schedule
  • arstechnica.com language

Gemini 2.5 is rolling out everywhere, and you can pay Google $250 per month for more of it.

66. Trump’s trade war risks splintering the Internet, experts warn

  • 4 days ago schedule
  • arstechnica.com language

Trump urged to rethink trade policy to block attacks on digital services.

67. FCC chairman celebrates court loss in case over Biden-era diversity rule

  • 4 days ago schedule
  • arstechnica.com language

5th Circuit: FCC can't force broadcasters to report race and gender of employees.

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