Fortnite Battle Royale!

You know there are statistics you can only hear of in the United States of America. Statistics so shocking, statistics so huge, so humongous… you actually doubt them until you learn that it’s actually true.

This video game Fortnite Battle Royale currently rakes in over 200 million U.S. Dollars a month. A MONTH!!! Take a minute to absorb that.

A fucking video game. Shiet, @Deorro tumelalia maskio. 200 million dollars a month, with only about 700 employees at the company.

I got it straight from a DW news anchor yesterday. The game is very addictive. And apparently the gaming industry surpassed Hollywood and the American Music industry many years ago in terms of revenue. The gaming industry is the fourth biggest entertainment industry in America and globally behind TV, reading and gambling and it’ll probably surpass gambling soon. Fucking nerds.

I saw a youtube video of how they code games with their fancy and very wierdly shaped keyboards, in their stuffy little conference rooms, with their massive computer screens and they never look down at the wierdly shaped keyboards, hao watoto they type away at abnormal speeds, writing down massive amounts of code per second… enyewe hakuna kazi rahisi. But you get to milk your addicts off 200 million dollars a month. And in some situations they code live as gamers are playing, lakini ile focus iko hapo, you could fry an egg on those hot brains.

And then, wazungu is on another level. There’s a teenager called Ninja one of the top players of Fortnite. Ka mjamaa kakonda hivi, this little fellow streams himself playing the game live and rakes in 500 thousand dollars every two weeks from visitors to his site and merchandise sales. A million dollars a month. Drake paid him just to game with him live. Katoto. Just sitting at his desk. Using brains to make top dollar.

Just two days ago Ninja won a million dollars for charity: https://www.forbes.com/sites/insertcoin/2018/06/12/fortnite-superstar-ninja-wins-twitchs-first-e3-celebrity-pro-am-and-1-million-for-charity/

https://m.youtube.com/channel/UCAW-NpUFkMyCNrvRSSGIvDQ

https://www.theverge.com/2018/4/10/17222702/fortnite-ninja-drake-twitch-stream-again

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tktEAa79lwg

https://gamerant.com/fortnite-revenue-march-2018/

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How can you be talking about this in June…damn is this how Normie’s influence the gaming community…BTW this shit is about to be the most saturated like the era of rock band games
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Correction: Tyler ‘Ninja’ Blevins is a 27 year old man today but the footage they played on Dw tv was from his teenage years when he was still winning crazy gaming prize monies. Sio kitambo juzi tu, 2008, 09, 10.

Making 6 to 10 million dollars a year just for having fun. Ile pesa Waiguru aliiba NYS 1. And she had to be a govt. minister to do it. This boy just needs fingers and a bag of crisps.

@patco wachana na Bhangi, Movies and reality are 2 different things, you cannot type massive amounts of code per second. The codding you see in movies is really different from reality.

That aside congrats to PUBG and Fortnite for Making the Battle Royale format popular

hehe ulipotelea wapi mjamaa. And you killed your other handle I forget the name. The zack snyder one.

Those figures are shocking. 200 million dollars from a video game. That’s serious action.

Zingine ni Clash of Clans na Clash Royale.

sasa wewe hata kabla uketi chini ushaanza arguments. I said youtube video of coders NOT movie. Usijidanganye unajua kutype buda. Those nerds type. Split keyboards moja on each side of the chair. Hako kamtu kanaenda kuenda. Sio movie wacha nitafute hio kitu. Hata ilikuwa MSNBC.

I don kniw which account you speaketh but you should watch the story of fortnite

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vDyYMcjf500

And now almost every game is making a BR feature which BTW us just last man standing kutoka kutambo from racing games and such so kina MTU anasema they pupolarised a mode that has been popular in diff genres and most important you forgetting its free and the only nigga winning this year till rdr2 is
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Wait this guy us saying this game development needed a lot of coding…
You know its unreal engine 4 and if I ain wrong its the same company behind unreal torna so in short this guy is underutilizing the talent and engine… So I din even know how this ain seen as a cash grab until now

hehe truth be told sielewi unasema nini, but I like the enthusiasm. Do you play for money yourself?

@screwplus say what you may, fortnite and pubg are breaking records and bringing revolution to the industry. Battle royale is the future,

Nah cuz to get those views ain easy unless you got tits and I play at my leisure and with party just loom at this sorry ass sucka

Seen he has an update on the suggestions
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BR has been their kutako kitambo this as I said is like the craze for rock band games…and now dance central inatoka hadi kwa Wii fucking Wii…this gimmick is gonna die quickly and the success of god war shows the future is a simple rule…don fuck up your game with bs and make a game
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Nakuambia hakuna mtu anaweza type massive amounts of code per second especially for a critical system like a game to be shipped to millions. ask any programmer on ktalk watakuambia. Programming is not like writing a long verbose argument on ktalk.

Also like told Games dont require lots of code since the game engine takes care of that for you

Battlefield added Battle Royale so is it fucked?

Fucking nerds. He was a making a notepad tool when he made the game. And he is not a gamer himself.

It’s the gaming sensation of the year, and behind Fortnite’s success is a fascinating story of a tech visionary who made it big
By George Harrison
9th May 2018, 4:03 pm
Updated: 9th May 2018, 4:03 pm
FROM Drake to Stacey Solomon, it seems like everyone is playing it - and everyone else is talking about it.
Gaming sensation Fortnite recently passed 45 million players, with creators Epic Games now making around £90m a month from their addictive shooter.
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KOTAKU
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Ever since he was a kid, Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney was big on computing and designing things
In case you’ve missed it: Fortnite is a cartoony game with team-based co-operative missions as well as a wildly popular competitive multiplayer mode where you and 99 others fight to the death in an ever-shrinking arena.
It took over half a decade and a team of hundreds to put Fortnite together, with the game first teased in 2011 - six years before its eventual release in 2017.
And if you follow the Epic chain of command all the way to the top, you’ll find some of the brightest minds in gaming, including eccentric CEO Tim Sweeney, 47, and his billionaire backer Ma Huateng, 46, - otherwise known as Pony - the richest man in China.
You’ve probably never heard of either of them, but without Sweeney or Pony, the incredible story of Fortnite would never have played out like it did.
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Tim Sweeney is the founder of Epic, the company behind Fortnite
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Fortnite is this year’s ultimate gaming sensation, with over 45 million players[SIZE=6]Humble beginnings[/SIZE]
Sweeney, a born geek, had been programming games since he was just 11, obsessed with the rapidly developing computing industry.
But Epic Games wasn’t born until 1991, when Tim Sweeney, then a 21-year-old mechanical engineering student at the University of Maryland, released the company’s first game, ZZT.
Here, among Epic’s modest roots, you’ll find a game which is a closer relative of your computer’s notepad than a glossy title like Fortnite.
That’s because Sweeney had originally started out trying to make a notepad tool, but his software ended up turning into an action-adventure puzzle game, which Sweeney released after nine months in development.
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KOTAKU
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The Epic CEO has been programming games since he was 11
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Sweeney’s first game, ZZT, was a far cry from the polished Fortnite experience
With a favourable reception from its few thousand dedicated fans, ZZT helped Sweeney establish a reputation for himself and for his company, and Epic, originally located at Sweeney’s parents’ house in Maryland, quickly grew into a proper business.
Then, in 1998, Epic released first-person shooter game Unreal, which ran using Sweeney’s powerful new game development software: the Unreal Engine.
Sweeney realised that there was money in polishing the engine he had made and selling it to other game developers, and Epic became best known for the Unreal Engine - which is used to power most big-name games, including Fortnite, today.
In 1999, Epic moved away from Sweeney’s family home to a swanky campus in Cary, North Carolina, complete with a climbing wall, giant slides and a towering sculpture of Marcus Fenix - a character from Epic’s Gears of War series.

Fortnite’s Battle Royale has children hooked — here’s why it’s so popular
[SIZE=5]Epic Games’ other hits[/SIZE]

- The Unreal series (1998 - present)
- The Gears of War series (2006 - 2011)
[B]- Bulletstorm /B
- The Unreal Engine (1998 - present), used to power thousands of games including Borderlands (2010), Batman Arkham City (2011), Bioshock (2007), Deus Ex (2000) and Mass Effect (2007).
[SIZE=6]The game guru who doesn’t play games[/SIZE]
Tim Sweeney is still the CEO of Epic Games, with a $75million net worth (£55m) and a thriving company which employs 800 people across America, Asia and Europe, including in Edinburgh, Newcastle and Staffordshire.
He’s established a reputation for himself as a quirky character: he reportedly doesn’t eat vegetables (because “they’re what food eats”) and he is obsessed with VR, believing that we will be able to live Matrix-like virtual lives within a few decades.
Bizarrely, he’s not a big gamer himself, instead taking a greater interest in the programming behind the games.
And the forward-thinking millionaire isn’t a conventional spender either: over the years he has splashed over $15 million (£11m) to preserve 36,000 acres of mountainous North Carolina wilderness.
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YOUTUBE
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Sweeney has been programming games since he was 11… but he’s not a big player himself
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PA:PRESS ASSOCIATION
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Stars like Drake have boosted Fortnite’s profile by tweeting their support and streaming themselves playing
[SIZE=5]Fortnite’s Celebrity Fans[/SIZE]

Rapper Drake smashed view records on streaming site Twitch when he settled in for a Fortnite session earlier this year.
Fellow rapper Travis Scott joined in too, alongside NFL star Juju Smith-Schuster.
Spurs star Dele Alli is keen too, even celebrating a goal with a classic Fortnite dance move.
Chance The Rapper and Joe Jonas have also tweeted about their love of Fortnite.
American comedian and actress Roseanne Barr also revealed herself to be a fan on Twitter, and theSun’s very own columnist Stacey Solomon is hooked.
Meanwhile, US basketball star Josh Hart loves the game so much he plays basketball in custom Fortnite-themed trainers.
[SIZE=6]A formidable partnership[/SIZE]
Away from the hiking trails of his North Carolina reserve, Sweeney is an astute businessman.
He and his Epic colleagues realised that the games industry was changing: free-to-play models were becoming more popular, and players were demanding constantly evolving games.
So in 2012, a year after Fortnite was first announced, he teamed up with Chinese free-to-play gaming and app company Tencent, worth $580 billion (£428bn).
Founded and run by Chinese billionaire Ma Huateng, Tencent, the giant behind WeChat, bought a 40 per cent stake in Epic for $330m (£243m) so the companies could work together.
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REUTERS
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Free-to-play guru Ma Huateng bought into Epic Games shortly after Fortnite was announced
It’s this combination of Tencent’s experience and Epic’s vision which has made Fortnite the success it is today, with the free game making a fortune every month through small in-game purchases by players.
These purchases in turn fund constant updates to the game, which Tencent has rolled out to the huge audience in China - helping the game to become a success in Asia as well as in the West.
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GLASSDOOR
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Epic Games’ North Carolina office features an enormous statue of one of their characters
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GLASSDOOR
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A climbing wall and slide add colour to the company’s HQ
The head of Tencent is another interesting figure: Ma Huateng - who, like Sweeney, founded his company in 1998 and remains CEO today.
Known as Pony, because his name translates to “horse” in English, the billionaire businessman is the world’s 14th richest man and the wealthiest in China.
He built up his business by jumping on great ideas, with Tencent known for imitating rival’s products - from chat services to games - and doing them in a better, more slick way.
It’s a practice which has also earned him the nickname “the scorpion”, because he will patiently lie in wait before ruthlessly pouncing on the opposition.
This reputation has become so pronounced that a saying among Chinese start-up founders is “Life, Death or Tencent” - meaning their idea will either work, flop, or inspire a copycat product by the internet giant.
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KOTAKU
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Sweeney’s success as a programmer has netted him a personal fortune in the millions
[SIZE=5]Copycat Wars[/SIZE]

Fortnite is very similar to the Battle Royale gameplay of Fortnite’s biggest rival, PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds (PUBG), which was released in March 2017 and centres around the same basic premise (and also runs using Epic’s Unreal Engine, with Tencent owning a stake in the game).
The games are so alike that Chang Han Kim, vice president of PUBG maker Bluehole, called out Fortnite for copying its format.
He said in a press release in September: “We are concerned that ‘Fortnite’ may be replicating the experience for which ‘PUBG’ is known.”
The similarities are clearly there, although that shouldn’t be a surprise given Tencent’s reputation for taking good ideas and just running with them.
However, there aren’t any patents on the Battle Royale format, and Fortnite has its own unique building system thrown in - as well as an original, cartoony art-style.
[SIZE=6]The game that conquered the world[/SIZE]
Fortnite’s Battle Royale mode revolves around 100 players being dropped into an ever-shrinking arena, where they must scavenge for weapons and equipment to kill off rivals and become the last man standing.
But the simple premise, quirky art style and free-to-play model behind it has ensured that Fortnite is the victor among the crowded multiplayer shooter market.
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EPIC GAMES
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Fortnite’s free-to-play model has helped to catapult it into the public eye

Def no…if you go to a restaurant and find you can order beers and not only wine will.you say they are offering a bad service…I have told you countless times they are doing it as an after thought and this is EA …unadhani wata meza mate wase wakikula nyama …but cod din the unthinkable took out a feature and replaced it with br…that’s messed up fr me as a blops fan this is was no egg on the face this some fuck you and fuck ya mama shit…but bf5 got our back this looks to have a good story line for once and the gameplay already out has ticked all the right boxes…
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Why all this …this like suckin Romero’s dick for doom fuck outta here plus this game is most tencent baby than epic games you din watch the vid huh?
And BTW I read cuz you def din watch the vid cuz kuna jina moja hapo imetajwa and his the recent dev to fuck up

businesses make money for their owners. Battle Royale has proven to be a cash cow to both PUBG and Fortnite so who is EA not to add it? People are playing those games and loving them. your opinion wont matter

:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D refer to this reply below