Five years ago, Gearbox boss Randy Pitchford predicted that, "when we look back at Steam in five or 10 years, it may look like a dying store and other, competitive stores, will be the place to be," alluding primarily to the then-fresh Epic Games Store and its more generous developer revenue split. Cut to today and not only is Steam quite lively, Borderlands 4 is eyeing Steam and the Epic Games Store, whereas Borderlands 3 was briefly an Epic exclusive. As some onlookers readied their eggs, Pitchford addressed his inaccurate prediction online, defending his stance as pro-competition.

"Yeah, Steam is the leading store for PC games and Epic is not pressing their advantage (which is a shame)," Pitchford said in a tweet . "I’m a Steam customer, but sure wish they had more and better competition that was more favorable to artists, designers, and creators than to the retailer. I will continue to support competitors to Steam and also support Steam.

" Separately, Pitchford added, "I don’t think I am anti-Steam as much as pro competition. It’s frustrating how much Steam takes given what they provide. I will happily support competitive platforms that are more favorable to artists and developers and creators than favorable to the retail operators.

" At base, Valve gets a 30% revenue cut of Steam game sales, whereas the Epic Games Store takes 12% and offers six-month exclusivity deals that give developers 100% of the revenue. Epic boss Tim Sweeney has trumpeted this selling point for .