Unity angers developers by announcing new fees based on game installs

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Unity Technologies has made a major change to how it charges developers for using its engine. Starting January 1, 2024, Unity will begin charging a fee for every time a game is installed, with fees dependent on which subscription to Unity a developer has. Once a game has surpassed a threshold of $200,000 in revenue and 200,000 installs and are in either the Unity Personal or Unity Plus subscription tier, a "Unity Runtime Fee" will be applied to the development team. Those subscribed to Unity Pro, which is a tier that Unity will soon be retiring, or Unity Enterprise, will instead be charged fees once a game has made $1,000,000 and has been installed 1,000,000 times.

Depending on which tier a creator is a part of, these new changes could see developers charged as much as $0.20 every single time a game is installed by a user after the threshold is surpassed. It has been confirmed that if an owner of a game were to install a game, delete it, and redownload it, it would cost the developer money, if they were already past the limit. This will also retroactively apply to already released games as well.

Smaller developers have expressed their concerns over these changes, with some concerned about how pirated game installs will cost them, the impact it will have on free to play titles, or that Xbox Game Pass installs will also count, and have the potential to see smaller companies put at risk because of it.



Additionally, Unity's own CEO, John Riccitiello, sold 2,000 shares of the company stock just prior to the announcement of the new Unity Runtime Fees.
 

N10A

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I could see this being used to harass devs, imagine if all the people who review bomb games decided to just download a game over and over again. Instead of just getting a bad reputation for a month at most, people could actually get laid off if the effect is big enough. I don't think basically handing direct control of a companies finances over to the internet is a good idea.

Edit: I wonder if this is an attempt to force devs to monetize their games more and effectively take a cut of said revenue? That one quote by the CEO or whoever comes to mind. Now you really would be kind of an idiot not to add micro transactions.
 

Lazyboss

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Unity did it, then other gaming engines companies will follow, developers can't get fucked alone so they will increase the games price even more, and who's going to eat all that shit alone? Us the consumers.
 

GunzOfNavarone

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That seems ridiculous and it also seems that the price of unity developed games would have to increase to the consumer. Either that or devs stop using Unity and games production suddenly takes a slump.
 

Ryab

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Unity Technologies has made a major change to how it charges developers for using its engine. Starting January 1, 2024, Unity will begin charging a fee for every time a game is installed, with fees dependent on which subscription to Unity a developer has. Once a game has surpassed a threshold of $200,000 in revenue and 200,000 installs and are in either the Unity Personal or Unity Plus subscription tier, a "Unity Runtime Fee" will be applied to the development team. Those subscribed to Unity Pro, which is a tier that Unity will soon be retiring, or Unity Enterprise, will instead be charged fees once a game has made $1,000,000 and has been installed 1,000,000 times.

Depending on which tier a creator is a part of, these new changes could see developers charged as much as $0.20 every single time a game is installed by a user after the threshold is surpassed. It has been confirmed that if an owner of a game were to install a game, delete it, and redownload it, it would cost the developer money, if they were already past the limit. This will also retroactively apply to already released games as well.

Smaller developers have expressed their concerns over these changes, with some concerned about how pirated game installs will cost them, the impact it will have on free to play titles, or that Xbox Game Pass installs will also count, and have the potential to see smaller companies put at risk because of it.

https://twitter.com/AggroCrabGames/status/1701691036832309260

Additionally, Unity's own CEO, John Riccitiello, sold 2,000 shares of the company stock just prior to the announcement of the new Unity Runtime Fees.
Shit like this is why I was never a fan of Unity. They just keep making changes that piss people off. Doesnt help that every god damn engine update breaks my projects.
Post automatically merged:

Yeah Godot is great. The lack of console support is a shame, but you can always just port your game over the old fasioned way.
That is more due to the console SDKs not working with the model that Godot uses. Open source stuff does not mix well.

EDIT: apparently they are working on console support.
 
Last edited by Ryab,

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