List of games by Epic Games

Epic Games is an American video game and software developer based in Cary, North Carolina. It was founded by Tim Sweeney as Potomac Computer Systems in 1991, originally located in his parents' house in Potomac, Maryland. After releasing one game under that name, ZZT (1991), Sweeney renamed the company to Epic MegaGames in early 1992 "to make it look like we were a big company" even though it had no other employees or offices.[1] Over the next few years, the company continued to make PC games, largely self-published, including the side-scrollers Jill of the Jungle (1992) and Jazz Jackrabbit (1994). They additionally published titles by other developers such as Epic Pinball (1993) by Digital Extremes and Tyrian (1995) by Eclipse Software. Epic also slowly expanded in size, reaching 8 employees by 1994.[1]

The current logo of Epic Games

Beginning with the 1996 game Fire Fight, Epic ceased its publishing and self-publishing operations, and after the release and success of Unreal (1998) renamed itself in 1999 to Epic Games and moved to Raleigh, North Carolina; it and a temporary office in Canada during Unreal's development were the first time the company had a central office for their employees.[1][2] After the name change, the company focused almost solely on the Unreal series of shooters for the next few years, and expanded from PC games to console games. In 2006 the company launched its Gears of War series of games, and in 2010 the company moved into mobile games with the Infinity Blade series after purchasing Chair Entertainment. Epic returned to retail publishing in 2015 for its own titles, and has solely self-published since. In addition to games, Epic develops and licenses the Unreal Engine, which is also used as the game engine for many of its own games.[1]

Sweeney describes the history of the company in four eras: The shareware era from founding through 1997 as the company grew to 15 employees; the Unreal era from 1998 to 2005 as the company focused on developing that franchise through external publishers and grew to 25 employees; the Gears of War era from 2006 to 2011 as the company shifted focus to console games and grew to around 200 employees; and the current era where the company has moved back to PC games and self-publishing, spinning off or closing some of its subsidiary developers such as People Can Fly and Big Huge Games.[3] Epic Games has worked on over 50 games since 1991, and has multiple games under development.

Video games

Epic Games has used the names Potomac Computer Systems, Epic MegaGames, and Epic Games; the name given for the company is the one used at the time of a game's release. Many of the games under the Epic MegaGames brand were released as a set of separate episodes, which were purchasable and playable separately or as a group. In many cases the initial episode of a game was freely distributed as shareware to drive interest in the other purchasable episodes.[1] Titles are listed for games that gave individual names to their episodes instead of episode numbers.

Title
(Episodes)
System Release date Developer(s) Publisher(s) Ref(s)
ZZT
("Town of ZZT", "Caves of ZZT", "Dungeons of ZZT", "City of ZZT")
MS-DOS October 1991 Potomac Computer Systems Potomac Computer Systems [2]
Best of ZZT
("The Secret of Headhunter Isle", "Royal Treasures")
MS-DOS 1992 Epic MegaGames[lower-alpha 1] Epic MegaGames [5]
ZZT's Revenge
("Ezanya", "Fantasy", "Crypt", "Smiley Guy", "Manor", "Darbytown")
MS-DOS 1992 Epic MegaGames[lower-alpha 1] Epic MegaGames [5]
Super ZZT
("Lost Forest", "Monster Zoo", "Proving Grounds")
MS-DOS 1992 Epic MegaGames Epic MegaGames [6]
Adventure Math MS-DOS 1992 Epic MegaGames Epic MegaGames [6]
Brix MS-DOS 1992 MicroLeague Epic MegaGames [6][7]
Castle of the Winds
("A Question of Vengeance", "Lifthransir's Bane")
Windows 1992[lower-alpha 2] SaadaSoft Epic MegaGames [8][9]
Kiloblaster
("Death of a Starship", "No Way Out", "The Final Battle")
MS-DOS 1992 Epic MegaGames Epic MegaGames [6]
OverKill
("Edrax", "Gallifrey", "Hoth", "Voltair", "Pax Verde", "Unknown!")
MS-DOS 1992 Tech-Noir Epic MegaGames [6][10]
Jill of the Jungle
("Jill of the Jungle", "Jill Goes Underground", "Jill Saves the Prince")
MS-DOS June 1992 Epic MegaGames Epic MegaGames [6]
Ancients 1: Death Watch MS-DOS 1993 Farr-Ware Epic MegaGames [11]
Dare to Dream
("In a Darkened Room", "Search of the Beast", "Christian's Lair")
Windows 1993 Epic MegaGames Epic MegaGames [12]
Electro Man MS-DOS 1993[lower-alpha 3][lower-alpha 4] X LanD Computer Games Epic MegaGames [13]
The Adventures of Robbo MS-DOS 1993[lower-alpha 4][lower-alpha 5] X LanD Computer Games Epic MegaGames [13]
Solar Winds
("The Escape", "Universe")[lower-alpha 6]
MS-DOS 1993 Stone Interactive Media Epic MegaGames [6][14]
Zone 66
("Foreign Shores", "Ice Wind", "Desert Heat", "War Plains", "Highway Fury", "Plantation Crash", "Hell", "Final Frontier")
MS-DOS 1993 Renaissance Epic MegaGames [6][15]
Ken's Labyrinth
("Search for Sparky", "Sparky's Revenge", "Find the Way Home")
MS-DOS March 21, 1993[lower-alpha 7] Ken Silverman Epic MegaGames [17][16]
Epic Pinball MS-DOS November 6, 1993 Digital Extremes Epic MegaGames [1][2]
Silverball MS-DOS December 1993 Epic MegaGames, Digital Extremes MicroLeague [18]
Ancients II: Approaching Evil MS-DOS 1994 Farr-Ware Epic MegaGames [19]
Heartlight MS-DOS 1994[lower-alpha 4][lower-alpha 8] X LanD Computer Games Epic MegaGames [13]
Xargon
("Beyond Reality", "The Secret Chamber", "Xargon's Fury")
MS-DOS January 15, 1994 Epic MegaGames Epic MegaGames [20][21]
Epic Baseball MS-DOS February 1994 MicroLeague Epic MegaGames [22][23]
Jazz Jackrabbit
("Turtle Terror", "Ballistic Bunny", "Rabbit's Revenge", "Gene Machine", "The Chase Is On", "The Final Clash")[lower-alpha 9]
MS-DOS July 30, 1994 Epic MegaGames Epic MegaGames [2]
One Must Fall: 2097 MS-DOS October 10, 1994 Diversions Entertainment Epic MegaGames [27][28]
Radix: Beyond the Void MS-DOS July 1, 1995 Neural Storm Entertainment Epic MegaGames [29][30]
Tyrian
("Escape", "Treachery", "Mission: Suicide", "An End to Fate")
MS-DOS[lower-alpha 10] September 14, 1995 Eclipse Software Epic MegaGames [31][32]
Extreme Pinball MS-DOS, PlayStation October 1995 Epic MegaGames, Digital Extremes, High Score Entertainment Electronic Arts [33][34]
Fire Fight Windows June 24, 1996 Chaos Works, Epic MegaGames Electronic Arts [35]
7th Legion Windows August 26, 1997 Epic MegaGames, Vision Software MicroProse [36]
Jazz Jackrabbit 2
("Formerly a Prince", "Jazz in Time", "Flashback", "Monkey Trouble")
Windows, macOS May 7, 1998 Epic MegaGames, Orange Games Gathering of Developers [37][38]
Unreal Windows, macOS May 22, 1998 Epic MegaGames, Digital Extremes, Legend Entertainment GT Interactive [39][40]
Age of Wonders Windows November 16, 1999 Epic MegaGames, Triumph Studios Gathering of Developers [41]
Unreal Tournament Windows, macOS, Linux, PlayStation 2, Dreamcast November 30, 1999 Epic Games, Digital Extremes GT Interactive [42][43]
Unreal Tournament 2003 Windows, macOS, Linux September 30, 2002 Epic Games, Digital Extremes Infogrames [44][45]
Unreal Championship Xbox November 12, 2002 Epic Games, Digital Extremes Infogrames [46]
Unreal Tournament 2004 Windows, macOS, Linux March 16, 2004 Epic Games, Digital Extremes Atari [47][48][49]
Unreal Championship 2: The Liandri Conflict Xbox April 18, 2005 Epic Games Midway Games [50]
Gears of War Windows, Xbox 360 November 7, 2006 Epic Games Microsoft Game Studios [51]
Unreal Tournament 3 Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 November 19, 2007 Epic Games Midway Games [52]
Gears of War 2 Xbox 360 November 7, 2008 Epic Games Microsoft Game Studios [53]
Shadow Complex Xbox 360 August 19, 2009 Epic Games, Chair Entertainment Microsoft Game Studios [54]
Infinity Blade iOS December 9, 2010 Epic Games, Chair Entertainment Epic Games [55]
Bulletstorm Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 February 22, 2011 Epic Games, People Can Fly Electronic Arts [56]
Gears of War 3 Xbox 360 September 20, 2011 Epic Games Microsoft Studios [57]
Infinity Blade II iOS December 1, 2011 Epic Games, Chair Entertainment Epic Games [58]
Gears of War: Judgment Xbox 360 March 19, 2013 Epic Games, People Can Fly Microsoft Studios [59]
Infinity Blade III iOS September 18, 2013 Epic Games, Chair Entertainment Epic Games [60]
Shadow Complex Remastered Windows, macOS, PlayStation 4, Xbox One December 3, 2015 Epic Games, Chair Entertainment Epic Games [61]
Robo Recall Windows March 1, 2017 Epic Games Epic Games [62]
Fortnite Battle Royale Windows, macOS, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Android, iOS, Nintendo Switch September 26, 2017[lower-alpha 11] Epic Games Epic Games [63][64]
Fortnite Creative Windows, macOS, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Android, iOS, Nintendo Switch December 13, 2018 Epic Games Epic Games [65]
Battle Breakers Windows, Android, iOS November 13, 2019[lower-alpha 12] Epic Games, Chair Entertainment Epic Games [67][68]
Fortnite: Save the World Windows, macOS, PlayStation 4, Xbox One June 29, 2020[lower-alpha 13] Epic Games, People Can Fly Epic Games [69][70][71]
Spyjinx iOS, Android 2020 (beta) Epic Games, Chair Entertainment, Bad Robot Productions Epic Games [72][73]

Cancelled games

Title Cancellation date Developer(s) Ref(s).
Bulletstorm 2 2012 Epic Games, People Can Fly [74]
Gears of War: Exile 2012 Epic Games [75]
Infinity Blade Dungeons 2013 Epic Games, Chair Entertainment [76]
Paragon 2018[lower-alpha 14] Epic Games [79]
Unreal Tournament 2018[lower-alpha 15] Epic Games [82]

Notes

  1. Best of ZZT and ZZT's Revenge were collections of ZZT games made by players with the included editor and submitted in a contest.[4][5]
  2. Castle of the Winds was self-published as shareware by SaadaSoft in 1989, with "A Question of Vengeance" released for free and "Lifthransir's Bane" sold. The Epic games version was a retail release of enhanced versions of both episodes.[8]
  3. Electro Man was an enhanced version of the original game, self-published by X LanD Computer Games in Poland in 1992 as Electro Body[13]
  4. Electro Man, The Adventures of Robbo, and Heartlight were released together in 1994 by Epic as the Epic Puzzle Pack.[6]
  5. The MS-DOS release of The Adventures of Robbo was an enhanced version of the original game, published by LK Avalon in 1989 in Poland as Robbo for the Atari 8-bit family.[13]
  6. Solar Winds' second episode was released as both "Solar Winds: Galaxy" and "Solar Winds II: Universe"
  7. The Epic MegaGames release of Ken's Labyrinth was an expanded and enhanced version of the original game, self-published by Ken Silverman as Advanced Systems on January 1, 1993[16]
  8. Heartlight was originally published by LK Avalon in Poland in 1990 for the Atari 8-bit family[13]
  9. The 1994 CD-ROM release of Jazz Jackrabbit, titled Jazz Jackrabbit CD, contained three additional episodes named "The Lost Episodes". Additionally, two special holiday editions were produced (Holiday Hare, 1994 and Holiday Hare '95, 1995), each containing additional holiday-themed levels.[24][25][26]
  10. Tyrian was re-released shortly after launch as Tyrian 2.0 with a fourth episode. It was later ported to Windows in 1999 (with a fifth episode named "Hazudra Fodder") as Tyrian 2000 without involvement by Epic Games. Additionally, Game Boy Color and Game Boy Advance versions were developed by World Tree Games but cancelled; the compiled game codes were released for free in 2007.[31]
  11. Fortnite Battle Royale was released for free early access on September 26, 2017, but this was later made the official release date, as the changes to the game became part of its ongoing nature rather than pre-release development[63]
  12. Battle Breakers was soft launched in Australia, New Zealand, and the Philippines in April 2017[66]
  13. Fortnite: Save the World was released for paid early access on July 25, 2017, and was not changed substantially for its official release date[69]
  14. Paragon was released in pay to play early access on March 3, 2016, and free-to-play early access on February 4, 2017[77][78]
  15. Unreal Tournament was made available to players on Windows, macOS, and Linux during development beginning on March 3, 2015, with these players able to contribute code or resources for potential inclusion in the game.[80] In December 2018 development was halted, though the existing game was still available to players[81]

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