Epic wants its store on the next‑gen Xbox — and Microsoft might actually let it happen

Epic isn’t just flirting with the idea of expanding beyond PC — it’s actively pushing to bring the Epic Games Store to the next‑gen Xbox. With the company reporting “serious growth” and confirming it has “been talking to the folks at Microsoft,” this isn’t a hypothetical. It’s a sign of how quickly the console landscape is changing as Microsoft warms up to third‑party storefronts and a more open ecosystem.

Epic Games is known for Fortnite these days, but did you know it also has a big PC gaming store? If you're reading this, I'm guessing the answer is yes, but it's no secret that it's often unfairly dismissed in gaming discourse.

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Epic Games Store will get a variety of new features soon, including cross-platform chat, and improvements to unify the different version store fronts. (Image credit: Epic Games)

In its annual report, Epic Games described a store that is steadily growing, despite claims to the contrary. Allison explained that spending on third-party games was up 57%, hitting $400 million last year for Epic, despite the fact that the industry overall is in a bit of a tough spot. Epic noted that its growth figures do not include first-party payment solutions. Some stores, like Apple's iOS, actively try to restrict games and app platforms from directing users to their own payment solutions. Epic does not, which allows companies to retain a bigger chunk of their revenue. Usage on third-party games also grew by 4%, hitting roughly 3 billion playtime hours.

"We've been talking to the folks at Microsoft. If they do follow through with allowing Steam and the Epic Games Store on the next generation of Xbox console hardware, we will be there. I'm fairly certain that'll require us to build an app that functions there."

Epic Games Store GM Steve Allison

Epic also hailed its free games program, noting that developers see a huge uplift when a game is free via its store, even on other platforms. We've heard similar from Microsoft when games are included in Xbox Game Pass — the boosted access seems to lead to an increase in virality for some titles, even on other stores. Epic sees this as a feature, not a bug.

"We take it very seriously," Allison says about its free games program. "The team loves to highlight games that they think are awesome, that may have been underserved or missed by players." Epic says that the free games it offers often see anywhere up to a 40% uplift on Steam and console platforms, driving interest and helping developers find new fans. But how does it help Epic itself?

"We bring in like 10 million new players a year through the program. It's very consistent. It's the best customer acquisition spend you can ever make, from a dollars-per-new-user standpoint," Allison explained. "It's really important for our players. I would never want to see us rug pull it away from people, it's kind of part of our identity."

Fortnite is available on the Xbox PC store, making it one of the only other ways you can play the game. But much like Xbox, Epic is also working through a variety of user experience issues and tech problems that highlight how far behind both platforms are versus Steam in terms of polish.

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"We're ripping out the underlying architecture," Allison says of the Epic Games Store, hinting at a big revamp for the near future. "We're well aware of complaints that the launcher can be slow to load, library taking up system resources — all these things will be profoundly improved when we ship this thing. It's coming in May or June. I saw a demo last week, the difference is significant."

Epic is also working on improving text chats between its games and platforms, bringing it in line with other services like Steam, Battle.net, and Xbox. Epic is also working on community tooling features, such as forums.

Xbox Ally Xbox App

Epic is collaborating with Xbox in a variety of ways. (Image credit: Windows Central | Jez Corden)

The next Xbox will have a layered interface to make Windows 11 more intuitive for controllers and TV sets, but it does require some legwork on the developers' part to truly optimize for it. On Xbox, Epic is also aware of the rumors. The next Xbox is a PC in essence, and thusly, will feature Steam, GOG, and indeed any PC store you want to install.

The next Xbox will have a layered interface to make Windows 11 more intuitive for controllers and TV sets, but it does require some leg work on developers' part to truly optimize for. Steam has its Big Picture TV mode, and Xbox has its Full Screen Experience mode. Epic is investigating these new opportunities as well.

"We've been talking about a bunch of these things," Allison tells me. "We've been talking to the folks at Microsoft. If they do follow through with allowing Steam and the Epic Games Store on the next generation of Xbox console hardware, we will be there. I'm fairly certain that'll require us to build an app that functions there."

Allison added that a fully Xbox Full Screen Experience-optimized Epic Games Store is not in the schedule right now, but is frequently talked about. "I expect we'll end up doing that. I can't commit because we're in the middle of these big projects. I'm a big, big fan. I've bought every version of the ROG Ally, including the new Xbox Ally. It's awesome to be able to play both Steam and Epic Games Store games on one device. We do need to build for it, but it probably won't happen this year. Maybe next year."

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