Fortnite will return to iOS after court slams Apple’s “obvious cover-up”
"This is an injunction, not a negotiation. ... The Court will not tolerate further delays."

Epic CEO and founder Tim Sweeney said in a Zoom call with press Wednesday night that the company is "going to do everything we can to bring Fortnite back to the iOS App Store next week." That decision comes after a federal district court found late Wednesday that Apple was in "willful violation" of a 2021 injunction designed to allow iOS developers to steer customers to alternate payment processors for in-app purchases.
That 2021 injunction wound its way through years of appellate review until January 2024, when the Supreme Court declined to hear a final attempt by Apple to overturn it. Since then, the District Court for Northern California has been holding a series of evidentiary hearings examining the internal development of Apple's so-called "compliance plan" for the injunction.
In a scathing Wednesday night order, District Court Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers determined that Apple had engaged in a plan to "thwart the injunction's goals," and then engaged in an "obvious cover-up" to prevent that plan from being revealed. Apple's response to the initial injunction "strained credulity," the judge said, and reflected Apple's attempt to "[thwart] the Injunction’s goals, and continued its anticompetitive conduct solely to maintain its revenue stream."