You want to buy something in a video game. Maybe itâs a battle pass. Maybe itâs a Sonic skin. Maybe itâs the current Halo Master Chief skin. That one costs 1,500 V-Bucks, but V-Bucks only come in packs of 400 or 1,000. You now have 300 leftover V-Bucks and Epic Games has your extra money. Itâs scammy and it sucks. Thankfully, itâs also going away.
âStarting October 14, weâre adding an Exact Amount offer to the Fortnite V-Bucks purchasing page that lets you âtop upâ your V-Bucks balance to the exact amount needed for the item youâre trying to buy,â the company announced on Thursday. âLetâs say you want an item that costs 500 V-Bucks but you only have 400 V-Bucks in your account. Youâll be able to buy just the 100 V-Bucks needed.â
The improved payment option is coming to Rocket League and Fall Guys as well, and will be available across Xbox, Switch, PC, mobile, andâŠnot PlayStation 4 and PS5? âWe will work to make this available everywhere,â the blog post reads. Sony did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Forcing players to buy extra currency by mismatching it with microtransaction prices is a tale as old as digital downloads on console. Platforms like Xbox were once infamous for making players buy games with points instead of real currency, a practice that didnât end until 2013. It was such a big deal when it changed that Microsoft made the announcement at that yearâs E3.
Fortniteâs âtop-upâ option comes a couple of years after Epic reached a $245 million settlement with the FTC over âdark patternsâ that tricked players into unwanted purchases.