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Rocket League is going free to play, will no longer be available on Steam

Psyonix has announced that Rocket League will go free to play later this Summer. Moreover, the team has announced that the game will come out on Epic Games Store, and that it will no longer be available on Steam.

Now the good news here is that those that already own the game on Steam will be able to play with everyone. The Steam version will also support cross-play support between all platforms. However, new gamers will no longer be able to download and access the game on Steam.

As Psyonix stated:

“Rocket League will release on the Epic Games Store on PC the same time it goes free to play. This version of the game will be identical to the version found on other platforms, and will feature cross-platform play anywhere you play Rocket League, including between the Epic Games Store and Steam.

Once Rocket League goes free to play, anyone who already owns Rocket League on any platform (including Steam) will be able to play and enjoy the game with full support for future updates and features. However, the Steam version will no longer be available to download for new players.”

So yeah, apparently this be another Epic Games Store exclusive, even though we’re talking about a free to play game. Still, this may significantly boost the Epic Games Store player numbers.

Psyonix has not revealed when exactly Rocket League will go free to play. Naturally, we’ll be sure to keep you posted!

49 thoughts on “Rocket League is going free to play, will no longer be available on Steam”

    1. The platform holder (Steam or Epic) get a cut from the microtransactions. Epic bought the developer, and want their full cut, but they can’t just delete the game from everyone’s Steam library, so this is what they settled on.

  1. Everything that Epic has done from the beginning was to build up their store and increase players making accounts there. From the exclusives to the free games it has been about building up EGS.

    It was never about trying to force Newell to lower Steam’s cut to help out other Publisher/Developers. It was obvious what Sweeney was really trying to do and his masquerade of being the good guy trying to help out Publishers/Developers was phony from the beginning.

      1. Wtf are you talking abut? Epic is a much bigger company than Valve, both in number of employees and net worth.

    1. Not so much but it still has 50-100k active players. Enough to find a game quickly and have fun or be competitive

        1. Well i phrased it like that because there used to be 300-400k across all platforns at once (it’s crossplay and works well).

    1. Their next game won’t even be on Steam, since EG owns them now, so I don’t think that even matters to those that care at this point now.

      1. Epic, bought this Dev Studio, last year, if you were watching, they said this was going to happen back then.
        Epic don’t need to pay them anything.

  2. uff all those idiots believing that epicsyfraud was a good and trying to help devs, and not monopolizing….to all the idiots who believe that, thanks for ruining pc market…

  3. Yeah this is a pretty shady move to pull, but I guess this is Epic’s new tactic of buying up studios, then forcing their games to go only EGS exclusive.

    Strong arming people into using their crappy storefront is in their company DNA.

  4. i dont like it when games get removed from my list but i dislike it even more when it involves such reasons

  5. I would still rather spend money on Steam or GOG than Epic. They don’t deserve any of my money until they fixed some of their problems.

    1. “until they fixed some of their problem” ? Like being 45% held by on of the worst cancerous company on earth, Tencent ?…..

    2. All my Epic games (5) are DRM free, I don’t even use the launcher.
      All “Launchers” are just bloatware.
      Still prefer GOG Games (350+), where I don’t even use, or need a “Launcher”.

  6. As someone who owns Rocket League on Steam, I see this as a good decision by Psyonix. Rocket League would be unlikely to stick around for long as a paid game, even if it were very cheap. They had to do this eventually or develop a sequel. If they can get some Epic money to help with the transition that’s a bonus. As long as my Steam copy continues to work I’m perfectly okay with the move.

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