Now I Get It: The 'Fortnite' craze

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It may be hard to believe, but some people on earth still don’t know about “Fortnite: Battle Royale.”

It’s a shoot-‘em-up game, and holy moly is it huge. “Fortnite” grew to 125 million players less than a year after its launch, its developer, Epic Games, said last month. In February, “Fortnite” hit a peak of 3.4 million simultaneous players, and the company made a record $318 million in May.

Celebrities like Drake are playing it; people like Tyler Blevins (better known as Ninja) are becoming celebrities by playing it.

“Fortnite” is affecting how kids talk, how other games are designed, and how sports players celebrate.

The “Fortnite” craze is disrupting school, addicting pro basketball and football players, and worrying parents.

“Fornite” is an action-packed game, laced with goofy fun.
“Fornite” is an action-packed game, laced with goofy fun.

Want to understand what all the fuss is about? Read on.

The game

“Fortnite” is a PVP, or player-versus player game. (The full name is “Fortnite: Battle Royale” It’s a spinoff of an earlier game, now called “Fortnite: Save the World.” And while we’re talking about genealogy: “Fortnite” borrows much of its look and game play from last year’s hit PVP, called “Player Unknown’s: Battlegrounds,” or PUBG for short.)

In “Fortnite,” you drop onto an island with 99 other players. You scrounge for weapons, you build things for protection, like shields and forts (echoes of “Minecraft”), and you shoot other players. The last person alive is the winner.

It takes only 20 minutes to play a round, assuming you live that long, which makes it snackable and convenient.

During that time, a steadily shrinking circle of shimmering blue contracts over the map of your island. It pushes anyone still alive closer and closer together as the game goes on, adding to the excitement.

The blue walls are closing in!
The blue walls are closing in!

The popularity

The screaming, white-hot success of “Fortnite” stems mostly from the fact that it’s free to play and available on every platform (Mac, Windows, iPhone, Xbox, Playstation, Switch, and, soon, Android). In other words, there are hardly any barriers to getting all of your friends in on the game. (Xbox and Playstation people can’t play each other, but everyone else can play together.)

Fortnite’s controls are tiny and clumsy on the phone, but people don’t seem to care much.
Fortnite’s controls are tiny and clumsy on the phone, but people don’t seem to care much.

You can make in-app purchases, but none of it affects the game play. It’s stuff like skins—different looks for your character—and funny victory dances. (Those are the dances we’re now seeing on professional sports playing fields when someone scores a goal.)

You can also buy a Battle Pass, which lets you earn more in-game goodies by completing challenges along the way. It costs $10 per season, which lasts about 10 weeks.

More reasons for the success of “Fortnite:”

  • It’s funny. “Fortnite” is basically a “kill or be killed” game, but there’s a lot of humor to it. You parachute onto the island not from a plane, but from a flying bus. And you can find a lot of good loot from… pink llama pi?atas. And the first vehicle to appear in “Fortnite” was a shopping cart.

  • It’s cartoony. There’s no blood or gore in “Fortnite,” much to the relief of some parents. When you die, you just kind of get beamed upstairs.

  • It’s constantly changing. There are always new locations, new weapons, new challenges. Some of them are around only for a limited time, like the Battle Bus at Christmastime, or the joint venture with Marvel that let you play as Thanos, the villain from the Avengers movies.

Nothing’s goofier than Thanos doing a victory dance.
Nothing’s goofier than Thanos doing a victory dance.

Basically, Epic Games did everything right in building this game. “Fortnite” may be the hottest game in years, but guess what? It’s only going to get hotter.

And now, you get it.

David Pogue, tech columnist for Yahoo Finance, welcomes comments below. On the Web, he’s davidpogue.com. On Twitter, he’s @pogue. On email, he’s [email protected]. You can sign up to get his stuff by email, here.

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