Epic Games Store confirms it’ll keep giving away free games during 2022

Control was one of Epic's free games last year
(Image credit: Remedy)

Epic Games Store will continue to give away freebies throughout 2022, it has been confirmed, in case you may have thought otherwise.

The news came as Epic presented its usual ‘year in review’ summarizing how the store did in 2021, and of course, giving us a taste of what’s to come this year – and that will certainly be a lot more free games, delivered on a regular basis as has been the case this past couple of years.

As PC Gamer reports, Epic said: “We’re excited to confirm that weekly Free Games will continue in 2022.”

What else can we expect from Epic this year? The firm promises it’ll push forward with the launcher app to make it perform better and fire up faster, alongside work on enabling users to better organize their games library and downloads.

Also, we’re looking at social features including “voice on platform with game agnostic parties”, backed up with work on beefing up community engagement aspects with user ratings for games and polls.


Analysis: How many free games were grabbed – and at what cost to Epic?

The news that free games will keep being deployed as tempters to sign up to the store – and stay engaged once there – is no real surprise, though there may be folks wondering just how long Epic can continue to fork out big bucks for some of the huge titles it secures as freebies. Remember in 2021 we saw the likes of Control, NBA 2K21, Dead by Daylight, Rage 2, and Sonic Mania, plus the year before, GTA V no less, and Total War Saga: Troy (which was free on its release), not forgetting Kingdom Come: Deliverance.

Epic notes that it gave away more than 765 million free games in total throughout 2021. That’s a whole lot of gaming hours at no cost, no doubt; no cost to players, that is, but of course, there is a cost to Epic as mentioned. As we’ve seen with past leakage, for the juicier titles, it’s not uncommon for Epic to fork out over a million bucks, and the real biggies like Control and GTA V must’ve taken a big chunk out of the company’s (admittedly stuffed) coffers.

At any rate, we’ll see many more freebies forthcoming, and the tinkering with the games library and download management is much-needed, and certainly welcome – as well as the additional social features. These should help Epic establish the store more firmly in its own right, even if arguably the former management capabilities should’ve been something that was a priority before now.

Darren is a freelancer writing news and features for TechRadar (and occasionally T3) across a broad range of computing topics including CPUs, GPUs, various other hardware, VPNs, antivirus and more. He has written about tech for the best part of three decades, and writes books in his spare time (his debut novel - 'I Know What You Did Last Supper' - was published by Hachette UK in 2013).