Epic Games Ends War with Samsung, Declares Victory in the Pettiest Billionaire Slap Fight of the Year

In the latest episode of Big Tech’s never-ending courtroom soap opera, Fortnite creator Epic Games has gracefully slammed the door shut on its antitrust lawsuit against Samsung—a lawsuit that, in true Epic fashion, was less about justice and more about strategic whining.
The case, filed in September 2023, accused Samsung of conspiring with Google to stifle the competition by making rival app stores practically invisible on Samsung devices. In other words, Epic was mad that people weren’t lining up to download their shiny new app store.
“We’re dismissing our court case against Samsung following the parties’ discussions,” said Epic CEO Tim Sweeney on X, formerly Twitter, because that’s where all serious legal announcements go now. “We are grateful that Samsung will address Epic’s concerns,” he added, without actually specifying what those concerns were or how they’d be addressed—classic PR smoke and mirrors.
Samsung, for its part, responded to the settlement with complete and utter silence. TechCrunch reported that neither Samsung nor Google replied to their request for comment, which in legal speak loosely translates to: “We don’t care enough to dignify this with a statement.”
The lawsuit centered on Samsung’s “Auto Blocker,” a feature that prevented users from installing apps from anywhere other than the Google Play Store or Samsung’s own Galaxy Store. Epic screamed foul, suggesting this amounted to a two-headed tech dragon colluding to choke out any third-party stores, including its own.
Back in 2023, Epic launched its own mobile app store in a valiant effort to be the Robin Hood of digital distribution—or, more accurately, to avoid paying Google’s 30% cut of all in-app purchases. This latest lawsuit was yet another attempt by Epic to portray itself as a rebel championing developer freedom, when in reality it’s mostly just mad about lost revenue.
Google had previously called Epic’s claims “meritless,” reminding the world that Android manufacturers can implement whatever security features they want. Samsung, equally unimpressed, vowed to “vigorously contest Epic Game’s [sic] baseless claims,” typo and all.
The timing of this settlement is telling. It comes hot on the heels of Epic’s courtroom win against Google in 2023, where a jury agreed that Google’s app store practices were indeed monopolistic. That ruling forced Google to open the Play Store to rival platforms, a move that had Google’s legal team reaching for their appeal papers faster than you can say “anticompetitive behavior.”
While that appeal is still pending, Epic’s strategic retreat from the Samsung case suggests it may have squeezed enough juice from its courtroom drama with Google. After all, fighting two trillion-dollar corporations at once is exhausting—even for a company with Fortnite money.
This truce, however vague and anticlimactic, allows Epic to focus on building its fledgling app store empire without wasting more money on legal fees. It also gives Samsung the opportunity to pretend like this lawsuit never happened—because let’s be real, no one was really losing sleep over Epic’s crusade for digital fairness.
For consumers, the impact of this legal armistice is minimal, unless you were among the five people who actually used Epic’s mobile store. For developers, it might mean marginally easier paths to app distribution in the future—assuming Epic doesn’t pick another fight before breakfast.
At the end of the day, this settlement is just another footnote in Epic’s quest to turn every business disagreement into a high-stakes public drama. But hey, if nothing else, it’s a great reminder that in tech, litigation is just another product feature.
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