Texarkana Gazette

Apple rejects Facebook gaming app once again

- By Seth Schiesel

Executives and engineers from Facebook’s games division submitted their new app, Facebook Gaming, to Apple last month for approval to offer it in the iPhone maker’s App Store.

Apple considered Facebook’s applicatio­n for a few weeks. This month, it delivered its verdict: denied.

The Facebook team was not surprised. It wasn’t the first time Apple had said no to the Facebook Gaming app. Or the second. Or even the third.

Since February, Apple has rejected at least five versions of Facebook Gaming, according to three people with knowledge of the companies, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the details are confidenti­al. Each time, the people said, Apple cited its rules that prohibit apps with the “main purpose” of distributi­ng casual games.

Facebook Gaming may also have been hurt by appearing to compete with Apple’s own sales of games, two of the people said. Games are by far the most lucrative category of mobile apps worldwide. Apple’s App Store, the only officially approved place for iPhone and iPad users to find new games and other programs, generated about $15 billion in revenue last year.

Apple’s rejections of the app from Facebook, a fellow Silicon Valley powerhouse, illustrate the control it exerts over the mobile software and entertainm­ent ecosystem — clout that regulators are increasing­ly examining. On Tuesday, the European Commission, the executive body of the European Union, said it had opened a formal antitrust investigat­ion into Apple to determine if the terms that the company imposes on app developers violate competitio­n rules.

“We need to ensure that Apple’s rules do not distort competitio­n in markets where Apple is competing with other app developers,” said Margrethe Vestager, the European Commission executive vice president in charge of competitio­n policy.

This week, Basecamp publicly complained that its new email app, Hey, had been denied from the App Store because it charged customers outside Apple’s payment system, keeping the giant company from collecting its 30% cut.

“We keep trying to find logic, consistenc­y in Apple’s App Store decisions,” David Hansson, Basecamp’s co-founder and chief technology officer, wrote on Twitter. “The answer is much more basic power. Apple can do what they want, when they want, so they do.”

Hansson added that the Justice Department’s antitrust division had contacted him earlier to talk about Apple.

Apple, which will hold its annual developer conference next week, said the App Store has many apps that offer casual games and that follow its rules, including the main Facebook app.

Facebook said it would release Facebook Gaming when Apple approved it.

Facebook announced its Gaming app in April as people were sheltering in place from the coronaviru­s pandemic and playing more video games. For the social network, the new app was a way to more deeply engage its users.

The free app has three main components: watching live streams of other people playing games; socially networking with other gamers; and playing simple games like Words With Friends and Thug Life. On both Apple and Android devices, those simple games can be delivered within Facebook Gaming’s app using software called HTML5.

Google quickly approved Facebook Gaming for its Google Play app store and began offering the app worldwide April 20. In the Android version of Facebook Gaming, a catalog of simple games is presented by category and with colorful icons. Some of those games allow players to spend real money for in-game purchases.

Facebook initially submitted its Gaming app to Apple for approval in late February, said the people with knowledge of the situation. Apple rejected that version, they said, citing Section 4.7 of its app rules, which state that HTML5 games are allowed “as long as code distributi­on isn’t the main purpose of the app” and “the code is not offered in a store or store-like interface,” among other restrictio­ns.

But the initial version of the Gaming app that Facebook showed to Apple was similar to the Android version, listing games by category in a manner that could be interprete­d as “store-like.”

Trying to get the Gaming app through Apple’s review process, Facebook then changed the design of the presentati­on of games in several ways, the people said. The colorful icons were removed in favor of a bland listing. The different games categories were removed to list all games at once. The ability to sort games was also taken away.

Facebook also included a version that looked almost exactly like how such games are presented already within the main Facebook app on Apple devices, which is a single unalphabet­ized, unsortable list, the people said.

Apple said no to each of them, pointing to the same rule, they said.

In Facebook’s most recent submission, the Gaming app did not include a separate tab for playable games and included no way for the user to choose from a wide selection of games to play, the people said. Instead, that version suggested certain games within the user’s news and activity feed.

Apple denied it.

Since then, Facebook has been weighing its next move. The company is considerin­g releasing Facebook Gaming on Apple devices without playable games at all, the people with knowledge of the social network said. Another option, they said, is continuing to make playable games even more difficult for users to find within the app.

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