Released by Epic Games on July 25, 2017, Fortnite has made its way to the top in the world of Esports. 2 years after release, Fortnite has fielded 507 Tournaments with a total prize money of $84,254,382, just enough to edge out CS:GO. Fortnite currently takes the second place in the list of Esports with highest prize money.
Epic Games Store has raised a few eyebrows with the $30 million Fortnite World Cup Finals in New York earlier this July. Even the regional qualifier rounds were also packed with hundreds of thousand dollars on the line for each week’s competition. The Fortnite World Cup bragged a staggering total prize pool of $40 million, even surpassing the notorious $34 million The International 2019.
How could Epic Games Store afford to spend that much amount of money on organizing tournaments? Well, I have to say it was all within Epic Game Store’s calculation. They gained an even more staggering number than what they spent on Fortnite tournaments.
How much has Fortnite made?
Though being free to play just like most Esports games out there, Fortnite has various ways of making money. It is mostly made through micro-transactions and subscription. It takes the form of skins and loots in-game and seasonal Battle Pass.
According to a LendEDU survey, 70% of players in 2017 spent money on the game at an average of $84 each player. The mobile version of the game has made $445 million on the Apple App store up until 2018. Fortnite is still growing by bounds and leaps nowadays.
With a player base of around 10 million and consistent growth, this is quite understandable for a popular Esports title like Fortnite. According to Nielsen's SuperData data tracking, Fortnite alone raked in $2.5 billion in just 2018. This results in total revenue of Fortnite comfortably above $3 billion by now.
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