In the ever-competitive video game industry, Epic Games' venture into the digital storefront arena using the Epic Games Store has become a tale of ambition, controversy, financial gamble, and of a company struggling to tell the difference between delusion and ambition.

Launched in 2018 as a direct competitor to Valve's industry-leading platform, Steam, the EGS aimed to disrupt the status quo with a more developer-friendly revenue split and a slew of user incentives, including a steady offering of free titles. However, as the dust settles on the storefront's first half-decade, it appears Epic Games' bid to upend Steam's dominance is facing uphill challenges, with profitability still out of reach, as per The Verge.

The vision for EGS was always grandiose, with Epic Games Store boss Steve Allison once projecting that the company hoped to secure half of all PC gaming revenue. Such aspirations have come at a cost, with Epic funneling vast sums into weekly free game offerings and exclusive deals to entice both players and developers to its platform. Yet, despite these investments, Allison admitted in a legal battle against Google that the platform is still chasing growth, with profitability still on the horizon.

Securing the entire Kingdom Hearts franchise is a big deal but Epic Games probably hasn't seen the necessary returns to justify its cost yet.