Google urges Supreme Court to halt app store injunction in Epic Games suit

Epic accuses Google of illegally stifling competition on Android devices in a lawsuit the gaming company won in 2023.

The injunction requires Google to allow users to download rival app stores within its Play store and make Play’s app catalogue available to competitors [File: Carlos Barria/Reuters]

By Reuters

Published On 25 Sep 202525 Sep 2025

Save

Google says it has urged the United States Supreme Court to halt key parts of a judge’s order that would force major changes to its app store Play as it prepares to appeal a decision in a lawsuit brought by Fortnite maker Epic Games.

In a filing late on Wednesday, the company, which is owned by Alphabet, called the federal judge’s order unprecedented and said it would cause reputational harm and put the company at a competitive disadvantage if allowed to take effect.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

Epic sued Google in 2020, accusing it of monopolising how consumers access apps on Android devices and pay for transactions within apps in violation of US antitrust law and won a jury trial in San Francisco in 2023.

The injunction issued in the case by US District Judge James Donato last year requires Google to allow users to download rival app stores within its Play store and make Play’s app catalogue available to competitors. It also compels Google to allow developers to include external links in apps, enabling users to bypass Google’s billing system.

Google said in its Supreme Court filing that the changes would have enormous consequences for more than 100 million US Android users and 500,000 developers. It asked the court to decide by October 17 whether to put the order on hold.

Google said it plans to file its appeal to the Supreme Court by October 27, which could allow the justices to take up the case during their next nine-month term, which begins on October 6.

Epic did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Advertisement

The jury that sided with Epic in the trial found that Google illegally stifled competition. Donato subsequently issued the order directing Google to make changes to its app store.

Google has denied wrongdoing.

In July, a three-judge panel of the San Francisco-based 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the injunction, ruling that the record in Epic’s lawsuit was “replete with evidence that Google’s anticompetitive conduct entrenched its dominance”.

The full 9th Circuit on September 12 declined Google’s request to review the panel’s decision.

Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney, in a post on social media, praised the 9th Circuit’s decision and said developers and consumers would soon benefit from it.

Google faces other lawsuits from government, consumer and commercial plaintiffs challenging its search and advertising business practices.

On Wall Street, Alphabet’s stock was trending downwards. As of 10:30am in New York (14:30 GMT), the stock was down 0.75 percent.