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Unreal Engine 6 is officially here, but I’m still holding my breath

Rocket League brings the hype, but gamers still want proof.

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Epic Games

For years, Unreal Engine has been the backbone of modern AAA gaming. Now, Epic is already preparing the next chapter, and surprisingly, Rocket League is leading the charge. Honestly, that part is kind of amazing. After spending years trapped on Unreal Engine 3, Rocket League fans are finally getting a modern engine upgrade, which feels long overdue.

And yes, the teaser looked exciting. Cleaner visuals, a connected ecosystem, and a glimpse at what Epic clearly wants to position as the next era of Unreal. But while the hype train is already leaving the station, I think I’m gonna stay on the platform for a little longer. Because right now, UE6 feels more like a vision statement than an actual engine reveal.

Is UE6 a gaming upgrade or an ecosystem upgrade?

So far, Epic hasn’t really explained what Unreal Engine 6 actually changes for gamers. Most of the conversation around the reveal centers on ecosystem integration, creator tools, and Epic’s broader metaverse ambitions.

Tim Sweeney has already spoken in the past about integrating Verse, Fortnite-style economies, and shared creator experiences directly into the future of Unreal Engine. And sure, that’s cool on paper. But what about the stuff players actually struggle with right now?

Not in 2024, but it’s coming. UE6 = UE5 + Verse + rough deployment parity into Fortnite and into standalone products + metaverse economy + standards + ?? magic TBD.

— Tim Sweeney (@TimSweeneyEpic) January 7, 2024

There’s barely any discussion around optimization, CPU efficiency, shader compilation stutter, traversal stutter, or reducing the absurd hardware demands modern AAA games continue to normalize. At the moment, UE6 feels more like an ecosystem update than a technological leap, and that’s where my skepticism starts creeping in. Because flashy creator tools are great, but most gamers would probably settle for smoother frame pacing and fewer stutters first.

The UE5 honeymoon already wore off

Part of the reason I’m cautious comes down to Unreal Engine 5 itself. When UE5 was first shown off nearly five years ago, it genuinely looked revolutionary. Nanite and Lumen felt like game-changing technologies that would redefine visual fidelity for the entire industry.

Fast forward to today, and while UE5 games absolutely look stunning, optimization has become one of the biggest complaints surrounding them. Modern PC gaming increasingly feels designed around upscalers first and native rendering second. DLSS, FSR, frame generation, and AI-assisted performance modes are now treated less like optional bonuses and more like requirements. Instead of engines becoming lighter and more efficient, gamers are increasingly expected to brute-force performance problems with more expensive hardware.

That’s why the timing of UE6 feels a little strange to me. We’re only now reaching the point where developers are fully transitioning to UE5, and even then, a lot of games still struggle with shader stutter, inconsistent frame pacing, and heavy CPU overhead. So naturally, the question becomes: are we actually solving those problems, or just moving on to the next shiny thing?

Less tech buzzwords, more optimization, please

Don’t get me wrong, I want UE6 to succeed. Seeing Rocket League finally modernized is genuinely exciting, and there’s still a part of me hoping Epic uses this generation to clean up many of the technical headaches that currently frustrate PC gamers. But before I start celebrating Unreal Engine 6, I need to see more than cinematic trailers and ecosystem buzzwords.

Show me better optimization. Show me lower CPU overhead. Show me fewer stutters. Show me games that don’t need AI upscaling just to feel stable on decent hardware. Because gaming doesn’t really need prettier tech demos right now.

Varun Mirchandani
Varun is an experienced technology journalist and editor with over eight years in consumer tech media. His work spans…
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