The Hidden Cost of Game Engine Lock-in (and What Web Devs Can Learn)
A game that earns $10M on Unreal Engine pays $450,000 in royalties. The same game on Godot pays $0. That's a real calculation from the GDC 2026 data, not a hypothetical. Game developers have been d...

Source: DEV Community
A game that earns $10M on Unreal Engine pays $450,000 in royalties. The same game on Godot pays $0. That's a real calculation from the GDC 2026 data, not a hypothetical. Game developers have been dealing with platform lock-in longer than most of us in web development. And the patterns they've discovered apply directly to every choice we make about frameworks, cloud providers, and deployment platforms. The royalty trap Unreal Engine is free to use. You pay nothing until your game earns $1M. Then Epic takes 5% of gross revenue above that threshold. Forever. This sounds reasonable when you're starting out. Most games never earn $1M. But the ones that do end up paying serious money for a decision made years earlier when the project was a prototype. Revenue Unreal royalty Equivalent developer salary $2M $50,000 0.5 senior devs for a year $5M $200,000 2 senior devs for a year $10M $450,000 4 senior devs for a year Godot, the open-source alternative, charges $0 at every revenue level. MIT lic