A spokesman for Epic Games said in a statement Thursday that the company is not affiliated with the BBB and that it has “redirected all player submitted complaints from the BBB to our Player Support staff.” When asked how many complaints the company has received directly, the spokesman said that Epic Games gets customer service requests daily for a variety of reasons. He added that concerned customers should reach out to Epic Games’s customer service.

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However, the BBB noted that it, too, has tried “on numerous occasions” to contact Epic Games but it never received a response from the gaming company.

The BBB said that it has received 279 complaints about Epic Games’s customer service and gaming issues over the past three years, but that 271 of them were reported just in the past year — as the company’s top game, Fortnite, has taken on a life of its own.

Over the past three decades, Epic Games has made an impact on the gaming industry, creating smash hits such as Unreal, Gears of War and Shadow Complex.

Fortnite, a last-person-standing multiplayer survival game, which was described by TechCrunch as “Lord of the Flies meets Hunger Games,” has turned into the latest game craze — accumulating more than 200 million players and helping to earn Epic Games billions of dollars in revenue. Following its debut on Apple’s iOS, Fortnite generated $300 million in its first 200 days on that platform alone, according to analysis by Sensor Tower.

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Epic Games’s runaway success with Fortnite has catapulted the publisher into a leading position. The company reportedly made $3 billion in profit in 2018, thanks in part to its hit game and the cultural phenomenon it has become.

Those profits are generated in large part through in-game micro-transactions from Fortnite, which is free to play. Once in the game, players can purchase for their characters new outfits and emotes, like signature dances and gestures, using V-Bucks, the game’s online currency. V-Bucks are sold for real money at an exchange rate of 10 V-Bucks to $1. In-game merchandise vary in price, with the most popular outfits and emotes ranging from $15-$20.

But at least some players, and possibly their parents, are not pleased with the experience.

Some who filed complaints with the BBB claimed that their credit cards had been charged for in-game purchases without authorization and that when they approached Epic Games with the issue, the company declined to return the money.

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“Epic Games is swindling parents with unauthorized game purchases, tricking young consumers & using shady practices for billing,” one person wrote on the BBB’s website. “I authorized a 1-time Epic Games purchase for my 11 yr-old son, only to discover EG did NOT erase my credit card info, & thus my son has been making unauthorized purchases, racking up $140 in less than 8 days after the initial authorized purchase.

"NEXT, [the] alleged customer support links are a scam: I called the main phone line & tried multiple options to reach any support, only to reach multiple dead-ends. I emailed as well but received a 3rd-party disclosure, thus I have been scammed in reaching out to customer support. I strongly suspect Epic Games designed their Fortnite main Web page to first lure kids with the $5 game download, BUT purposely DO NOT PROVIDE parents a means to control their credit card security, resulting in the possibility of multiple unauthorized purchases.”

Others claimed that the Epic Games accounts “are regularly hacked, stolen & sold to third parties” and that the company offers “no way to block thieves & reclaim accounts.”

“This is a SCAM,” one person said.

“I’ve been wronged,” another said.