The Epic Games Store's equivalent to Steam Direct is in beta

Epic Games logo behind the Epic Games Store
(Image credit: SOPA Images / Contributor)

Epic Games is now testing a system that will make it easier for developers to self-publish on the Epic Games Store. For users, the new tools mean that the store's library will "grow faster than ever before," the company says.

Right now, getting a game approved and published on the Epic Game Store requires working directly with Epic at every step of the process. The company plans for the new self-publishing tools to streamline the process, allowing developers to "set up their own product pages, achievements, pricing, offers, and upload builds and updates" on the store.

The system is similar to Steam Direct, which allows any developer to submit their game to Steam and publish it on the platform for a fee. For Steam, self-publishing vastly increased the number of games that released on the platform, but was also criticised by users for the loss of quality control, which resulted in an influx of shovelware. Valve's response hasn't been to create a stricter approval process, but to iterate on the filtering tools and algorithms that determine which games users see first on the Steam storefront. 

Epic says its tools will similarly result in "less dependence" on the Epic Games Store team, though it's unclear whether that means games will still be individually reviewed in detail before they're allowed to go live. The blog post also does not explicitly state whether or not there will be fee for game submission. Steam charges $100. We asked Epic about these details, but the company declined to comment for now.

Epic says its main requirements for publication are for games to successfully launch, run, and also be consistent with the description on the game's page. Multiplayer games also need to fully support crossplay across all PC storefronts.

There's also a list of prohibited content which includes anything "hateful or discriminatory," pornography, illegal material, and things like scams and malware masquerading as games. Steam has similar rules, except that Steam does allow pornographic games so long as they don't depict real people (a distinction that has caused some confusion and controversy in the past). 

What Steam doesn't generally do is reject games on the basis of quality or taste, except in extreme cases (it removed a game that simulated school shootings, for example). What sort of judgment calls Epic will or won't make is yet to be seen, although back when the Epic Games Store launched, CEO Tim Sweeney said that it won't accept "crappy" games.

Epic's self-publishing system is being introduced in closed beta right now to "stress test the toolset and improve it with developers' feedback while increasing the number of games and apps on the Epic Games Store." Anyone looking to participate can fill in a form to be considered.

The new system should be good news for the growing number of developers who are choosing to self-publish their games and might not have the means to get an Epic Store rep on the phone. Death Trash developer Stephan Hövelbrinks revealed on Twitter that the self-published game has managed to recoup its development costs in two weeks. Meanwhile, Outriders developer People Can Fly has been having issues with publisher Square Enix, citing it as a reason for choosing to self-publish an upcoming, currently unannounced game.

In tangentially related Epic news, indie developer Innersloth expressed disappointment with the company earlier this week for perhaps taking a few too many cues from Among Us for Fortnite's newest game mode, Fortnite Impostors.

Mollie Taylor
Features Producer

Mollie spent her early childhood deeply invested in games like Killer Instinct, Toontown and Audition Online, which continue to form the pillars of her personality today. She joined PC Gamer in 2020 as a news writer and now lends her expertise to write a wealth of features, guides and reviews with a dash of chaos. She can often be found causing mischief in Final Fantasy 14, using those experiences to write neat things about her favourite MMO. When she's not staring at her bunny girl she can be found sweating out rhythm games, pretending to be good at fighting games or spending far too much money at her local arcade.  

Read more
Epic Games logo behind the Epic Games Store
Epic gave away nearly 600 million games in 2024, and it's 'not slowing down' for 2025
An image of Bellanoir, a new raid boss in Palworld, standing intimidatingly in front of a swarm of meteors.
Swamped with 1,500+ LinkedIn invitations in 24 hours, the manager at Palworld's new publishing arm 'underestimated how much interest there would be'
Gabe Newell in a Valve promotional video, on a yacht.
Steam's giving us all more control over update downloads, mainly because the big publishers just can't stop themselves releasing 100GB+ whoppers
Tim Sweeney, CEO of Epic Games, looks at the camera.
Tim Sweeney says Epic is losing billions fighting Apple and Google because it can afford to, jokes that 'we might run into serious financial problems after a couple more decades'
Palworld
Palworld developer 'blown away' by the response to its new publishing arm, which has received 150 game pitches just one week after opening
TF2 Heavy giving the Bret Rambo thumbs up
Steam now warns you if that early access game you're eyeing up has been abandoned by its devs
Latest in Gaming Industry
Atomfall screenshot
Rebellion CEO puts the studio's recent avoidance of layoffs down to control of scope and cost: 'Sometimes we say, guys, this game's too big'
Judge Dredd promotional image in Warzone
Half-a-dozen 2000AD games were in the works before fizzling out: 'The games you get to see are a tiny representative of the number that get started—sadly'
sniper elite 5 cover
Sniper Elite CEO reckons Swen Vincke is right to snarl at short-sighted publishers: 'You could argue that their business at senior level isn't making games… their business is managing their shareholders' perceptions'
Kasumi and Joker in Persona 5 Royal.
After 31 years in games, Persona director Katsura Hashino just got a 'Newcomer Award' and $5,000 from the Japanese government
A picture of Bowser behind jail bars.
Nintendo wins major French piracy case with EU-wide consequences: 'Significant not only for Nintendo, but for the entire games industry'
An AI-generated image, posted to Activision's socials, of a fake Crash Bandicoot game that doesn't actually exist.
Finding a new and inventive way to annoy everybody, Activision has company use AI to generate fake advertisements for games that don't exist
Latest in News
Pedro Pascal as Joel in a coat in winter looking unhappy
'Don't you know what he did?': The truth comes out in The Last of Us Season 2 trailer
Aloy
'Creepy,' 'ghastly,' 'rancid': Viewers react to leaked video of Sony's AI-powered Aloy
Split Fiction trailer still - Zoe and Mio standing side by side, wearing glowing neon sci-fi jammies
Split Fiction sells 1 million copies over 2 days
A soldier looks out over the Verdansk map, as a single tear rolls down his cheek.
The original Verdansk map is returning to Call of Duty: Warzone, to celebrate which we get a soldier crying to Nat King Cole
More than 5 years after launch, Control gets a surprise patch that lets everyone play the Hideo Kojima mission
Swen Vincke
Swen Vincke stamps seal of approval on Stardew Valley mod that yoinks the Baldur's Gate 3 cast out of D&D and into a cosy pastoral life