EGS damage report: Auto Chess may secretly be the biggest get of the night for Epic, however, given that both Valve and now Riot is making their own version (with the latter looking set to enter public beta imminently), this is going to be a very crowded market very quickly. Surprised a third party not already involved with MOBAs haven't jumped on.
EGS passing on Evil Genius 2, a game with a cult following, but moneyhatting Zombie Army 4, a game I'm not sure many people are interested in, does strike me as weird. Surely they'd want both or neither, not this weird half-and-half which makes Rebellion look very dumb.
The biggest shocker is Telling Lies not officially getting moneyhatted, despite being both an Annapurna published title and the next game from the Her Story team. Out of all the indie games shown, that's the one I'm most surprised Epic (seemingly) passed on.
The biggest narrative out of this is probably going to Shenmue 3 (and What The Golf) officially confirming that crowdfunding videogames are dead, at least amongst PC gamers. With that said, I do also have to note that this showed the second time Deep Silver and Tripwire accepted a moneyhat for one of their published games. In Tripwire's case, I could make a devil's advocate argument in that Mordhau has probably already eaten Chivilary 2's launch, but it could also be an indication of a more broader trend towards EGS for both companies games moving forward.
Basically, what I'm saying is that if Saint's Row 5 and Killing Floor 3 are EGS exclusives, I wouldn't be surprised at this point.
Silver lining: neither Dying Light 2 nor Elden Ring showed up. No indication that Techland, Square Enix, Bandai Namco or Sega are willing to accept Epic's moneyhats.