The legal dispute between Epic and Apple caused by the 30% commission charged by the Apple App Store to developers was recently rejected by the U.S. Supreme Court. The appeals of both parties were recently rejected, and Epic, who lost the lawsuit, does not seem to want to give up. Facing the court's rejection, Epic President Tim Sweeney published a long post on his personal Twitter, summarizing Apple's new "four major crimes" after the court ruling.
The first is the refurbished "Apple tax", which requires developers to pay a new 27% commission after providing a 3-6% commission for third-party payments, which makes it impossible for developers to sell their products at cheaper prices.
In the second and third "complaints", although Apple complied with the court's decision (the only part Epic won) and allowed developers to provide other payment channels, Apple did not allow developers to build in third-party payments. If you want to bypass the AppStore for payment, you may need to pop up a web page to enter the link, which makes the payment process cumbersome for users.
Finally, Apple is accused of designing a full-screen "scary" prompt to inform users of the possible risks of third-party payment for non-AppStore payment methods, for which Apple is not responsible.
At the end of the complaint, Tim Sweeney made it clear that "Epic will challenge Apple's malicious compliance program in the district court," which means that Epic's "legal war" against Apple is not over yet.