The hit battle royale video game has been out of the reach
of iPhone users since Apple (and Google) removed it from their app stores in
2020 over a tussle about in-app payment guidelines.
On iOS, Fortnite has previously been available through GeForce
Now (albeit part of a closed beta). Android users could simply download the
game from the Epic Games website.
The Microsoft partnership would allow users, including PC
gamers, to stream Fortnite on internet browsers on their devices just like
Netflix, irrespective of the hardware specifications.
The move is likely to help Microsoft attract more casual
gamers as the software giant doubles down on efforts to bolster its presence in
the video gaming market and take on rival Sony. The company earlier this year
unveiled a $68.7 billion takeover of Call of Duty maker Activision Blizzard.
Fortnite is the first free-to-play title to join the Xbox
Cloud Gaming service. "It's an important step to add a free-to-play title
to the cloud gaming catalogue as we continue our cloud journey," Microsoft
said in a blog post.
Since launching in 2020, more than 10 million people around
the world have streamed games through Xbox Cloud Gaming. The service is
available in 26 markets, including the US. Xbox Cloud Gaming is not available
in India.
Microsoft, as well as Epic Games and scores of other firms,
have criticised Apple's store practices, which require developers to pay
commissions of up to 30 percent for purchases made in the store.
The Fortnite creator has also been involved in a legal
battle with Apple, but it largely lost a trial last year over whether Apple's
payment rules for apps were anticompetitive.
That decision found Apple had suitable reasons to force some
app makers to use its payment system and take commissions of 15 to 30 percent
on their sales. © Reuters
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