Fortnite Blows Up Again After Original Map Returns, Has Biggest Day Ever In Six Year History

Fortnite characters rush into the past.
Fortnite characters rush into the past.

Just over a month after Epic Games cut nearly 900 employees, players have come roaring back to Fortnite to play its new nostalgia trip through the battle royale’s original map. The company announced that the six-year-old game had its biggest day ever on November 4, bringing in a whopping 44.7 million players.

“We’re blown away by the response to #FortniteOG,” Epic Games tweeted over the weekend. “Yesterday was the biggest day in Fortnite’s history with over 44.7 MILLION players jumping in and 102 MILLION hours of play.” Player count trackers like Fortnite.gg estimate the hit free-to-play game peaked at over 5 million concurrent players in the last 24 hours across all modes, almost double what it averaged for most of the year.

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Other things have stayed the same. Tyler “Ninja” Bevins, who rode Fortnite’s popularity to become one of the biggest video game streamers ever, was back on Twitch recently playing the Fortnite OG update for over 100k viewers. The game is currently surpassing the typically dominant Just Chatting category on the Amazon-owned platform’s leaderboard with over 600k viewers total. To put things in perspective, Fortnite hit over 12 million concurrent players during the 2020 in-game Travis Scott concert event shortly after the pandemic began.

It’s the buzziest Fortnite has been in a long time, and certainly since Epic Games announced mass layoffs and disinvestments in late September. “We’ve been spending way more money than we earn,” CEO Tim Sweeney wrote at the time. “While Fortnite is starting to grow again, the growth is driven primarily by creator content with significant revenue sharing, and this is a lower margin business than we had when Fortnite Battle Royale took off and began funding our expansion.”

Fortnite OG has put the mode that nets Epic the highest commission back in the spotlight. It remains to be seen if the company can keep the momentum up with other upcoming updates as the season goes on. Epic raised the price of V-Bucks, Fortnite’s in-game currency, just last week. The game might be returning to its 2018 roots, but the costs and competition are higher than ever.

Update 11/6/2023 9:10 a.m. ET: Added new stats supplied by Epic Games showing it was Fortnite’s biggest day ever.



            

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