Epic knows its launcher 'sucks' and is fully rebuilding it — faster, more stable client is on the way with player profiles and extended social features

Epic Games Store
(Image credit: Epic Games)

It's been more than 7 years since the Epic Games Store debuted alongside its launcher as a unified platform. For many, it's still a glorified Fortnite client: one that's opened to claim free games from time to time, but only out of necessity. The launcher has never posed a real threat to Steam for many reasons, and Epic is finally admitting to those shortcomings, with a promise to build a new version that's much better.

"We’re in the process of rebuilding the underlying architecture of the Epic Games Store Launcher and plan to ship improvements this summer. These changes will make the storefront on the launcher responsive and feel good to use, with fast load times and greater stability."

The news stems from the yearly platform review Epic released yesterday, citing a 4% increase in third party (non-Epic games) players on EGS. Amidst all that data, the company included a little section on what's next for 2026, where it formally announced a revamped Epic Games Store that will feature a "better social experience for players" with new additions like avatars, player profiles and private messaging.

"These social capabilities will be extended to Epic Online Services, opening up text chat for other developers to include in their games later this year. In Q2, we will add voice chat and game-independent parties to our social framework." Afterward, Steve Allison — GM for Epic Games Store — sat down with various outlets to provide insight on the journey the platform's taken and where it's going now.

Becoming competitive with Steam is the number one priority that drives most of these changes. But change starts with first acknowledging what's wrong, and Allison had heaps of self-awareness. "... The launcher sucks. Let's call it what it is. It's really slow," remarked Allison while speaking to Eurogamer. He went on to break down why that is:

"It makes calls to our back-end services to refresh every time you click around, and depending on your connection, you'll have to wait a couple seconds. And that just doesn't feel good, especially when people are comparing and contrasting and dual using one that doesn't do that." Allison is, of course, referring to Steam at the end there, which has always been very responsive — even if it's not the prettiest.

Valve Steam Frame

Steam is Valve's bread and butter, but don't shrug its impressive hardware efforts that further separate from rivals like Epic. (Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

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Hassam Nasir
Contributing Writer

Hassam Nasir is a die-hard hardware enthusiast with years of experience as a tech editor and writer, focusing on detailed CPU comparisons and general hardware news. When he’s not working, you’ll find him bending tubes for his ever-evolving custom water-loop gaming rig or benchmarking the latest CPUs and GPUs just for fun.