Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Servers cause issues for ‘Fortnite’ Summer Skirmish Series event

Add as a preferred source on Google
Fortnite #SummerSkirmish | Week 1

Everything had been smooth sailing for Epic Games’ Fortnite over the last couple months, with astronomically higher player-counts and cultural pervasiveness we haven’t seen since Pokémon Go launched, but the game’s latest esports tournament probably wasn’t what the company was hoping for.

Recommended Videos

The Summer Skirmish Series is an eight-week event mixing together “community creators” and particularly skilled Fortnite players, with $8 million in prize money up for grabs. It began with a duos tournament consisting of 50 teams battling it out in battle royale mode, with $50,000 going to the top team after 10 consecutive matches.

According to ESPN, however, the matches used North American servers despite having players from all around the world, and they ran into issues with lag — some players weren’t even able to move at all and were killed before having a chance to defend themselves. Epic Games promised that it would try to resolve these issues in future Summer Skirmish Series matches, and that each week will use a different game format. Solo matches should be particularly interesting, though we wouldn’t mind bizarre win requirements such as building the tallest structure without it being destroyed.

Epic Games recently kicked off the fifth season of Fortnite, which brought several changes to the enormous battle royale map. These include a desert are called “Paradise Palms” where “Moisty Mire” used to be located, as well as the “Lazy Links” golf course in place of “Anarchy Acres.” To go along with the golf course, a special All-Terrain Kart vehicle was also added, giving you and your team the opportunity to quickly move into position and kill someone or just really mess with them on the backswing.

The dimensional rifts we saw opening in the map have also been doing some bizarre things, transporting objects like the Durr Burger sign to different locations. We can only assume aliens are the culprit, and we hope to blast the extraterrestrial invaders in the future … maybe.

Fortnite is now available on Xbox One, PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch, PC, Mac, and iOS. An Android release is scheduled to arrive later this summer. The game supports cross-platform play between consoles, computers, and mobile devices.

Gabe Gurwin
Gabe Gurwin has been playing games since 1997, beginning with the N64 and the Super Nintendo. He began his journalism career…
Sony is helping bury physical games, and preservation is being left to clean up the mess
A reported 2028 cutoff for PS5 discs gives the industry a deadline it still doesn’t seem ready to handle.
A PS5 sitting on its side with two Dualsense controllers next to it on the right.

Sony’s reported plan to stop producing PS5 discs in 2028 would push PlayStation deeper into a digital-first future, where access depends on licenses, storefront policy, and platform support lasting longer than companies usually promise.

That’s tidy for Sony and ugly for game preservation. Physical media was never a perfect archive, but removing it before a serious replacement exists turns the survival of old games into someone else’s emergency. It also raises questions about long-term ownership, resale rights, and whether players can truly rely on purchases to remain accessible decades later.

Read more
PS Plus adds Modern Warfare III in July, plus two games worth your time
The unremarkable Call of Duty campaign comes bundled with remastered multiplayer maps, joined by For the King II and CrossCode.
PlayStation Plus July 2026 games featured

PlayStation Plus subscribers are getting a new lineup to dig into starting July 7, and this one leads with the biggest name Sony has put in the Monthly Games slot in a while. Call of Duty: Modern Warfare III headlines this month's lineup, joined by the co-op fantasy RPG For the King II and the retro-style action RPG CrossCode. All three games will be available on PS5 and PS4 and remain available through August 3.

A blockbuster with a rocky reputation

Read more
Cinder City wants 64GB of RAM, and the rest of its PC specs make it even weirder
Remember when 16GB RAM was enough?
Cinder City Gameplay screenshot

For years, PC gamers have joked that game developers treat hardware requirements like a shopping list. Cinder City might have just taken that joke a little too seriously. The game's newly listed recommended PC specs ask for a whopping 64GB of RAM. That's a figure that's raising eyebrows because almost everything else on the list looks surprisingly… normal.

64GB RAM paired with an RTX 4060?

Read more