Epic Games announced earlier this week that it was entering the digital game store business, and just a few days later the Fortnite developer is ready to open its marketplace. The new Epic Games Store, which will live inside the Epic Launcher app for Windows and Mac, is now live after a surprise launch in the middle of the Game Awards in Los Angeles this evening.

Epic is only confirming 14 titles right now, but its first two to be available right now are high-profile ones: Ashen from developer A44 and publisher Annapurna Interactive, and an all-new game from Bastion and Transistor developer Supergiant Games called Hades. Some other big names include Gunfire Games’ recently released Darksiders 3 and indie classics Journey and Super Meat Boy.

Here’s the full list of titles:

Ashen by A44 and Annapurna Interactive (now available)

Darksiders III by Gunfire Games and THQ Nordic (available Dec. 14)

Hades by Supergiant Games (now available)

Hello Neighbor: Hide and Seek by tinyBuild (now available)

Genesis Alpha One by Radiation Blue and Team17 (coming soon)

Journey by thatgamecompany and Annapurna Interactive (coming soon)

Maneater by Tripwire Interactive (coming soon)

Outer Wilds by Mobius Digital and Annapurna Interactive (coming soon)

Pathless by Giant Squid Studios (coming soon)

Rebel Galaxy Outlaw by Double Damage Games (coming soon)

Satisfactory by Coffee Stain Studios (coming soon)

Subnautica by Unknown Worlds (available for free from Dec. 14 - Dec. 27)

Super Meat Boy by Team Meat (available for free from Dec. 28 - Jan. 10)

World War Z by Saber Interactive (coming soon)

While Epic will be going up against the industry-leading Valve, which operates Steam and is the lead distributor of PC games, the Fortnite creator does have one very substantial benefit it’s hoping will entice game makers to release titles on its store. Breaking with the industry standard 70 / 30 percent revenue split, Epic said on Tuesday that its store would offer an 88 / 12 percent, which means it will let developers keep more revenue on each sale than any other competing game store. In addition to that, Epic is waiving its 5 percent royalty fee for all games made using its Unreal Engine, which is a huge boon for indie developers who are already squeezed for cash by paying the revenue split fee.

It’s far too early to tell whether Epic’s store will be a viable Steam competitor, or whether its favorable financial terms will bring enough developers over that consumers are willing to fragment their game libraries even further. But with its Fortnite fortunes, Epic is certainly well-off enough to make the most significant play for Steam’s business that the game distribution market has seen in quite some time. In addition to Epic’s new store, game chat app Discord also recently opened up its own digital marketplace to try and compete with Steam. Discord’s store, similar to Epic’s, is also initially focusing on indie titles.