| Fortnite Festival | |
|---|---|
| Developer | Harmonix |
| Publisher | Epic Games |
| Series | Fortnite |
| Engine | Unreal Engine 5 |
| Platforms | |
| Release | December 9, 2023 |
| Genre | Rhythm |
| Modes | Single-player,multiplayer |
Fortnite Festival is a 2023rhythm game developed byHarmonix and published byEpic Games. In the game, players perform songs while attempting to achieve the highest score possible based on their performance. Each song features four different instruments, and players choose which instrument they want to play, as well as the song's difficulty; higher difficulties change the layouts of the songs. A variety of songs can be chosen from, with a free selection that changes daily, as well as the opportunity to purchase songs outright from theFortnite item shop. Available songs range from those composed by Epic Games Sound Team to tracks from popular artists.
The game was released in December 2023 as part of theFortnite launcher. It released to mixed reviews from critics, who criticized the gameplay for being similar to other rhythm games, as well as the price of songs. Since release, numerous in-game "seasons" have been introduced, each themed around a specific featured artist or band. Other updates have also allowed the use ofguitar controllers, adding new features designed with the controllers in mind, allowing the game to be played similar toGuitar Hero orRock Band (which Harmonix also developed). Later updates also added aplayer versus player mode.

Fortnite Festival is arhythm video game accessible via theFortnite launcher.[1] The game features three modes, the "Main Stage", the "Jam Stage",[2] and the "Battle Stage."[3] In all modes, the players chooses a song to play and the aspect of that song they want to perform. These options are drums, lead, bass, and vocals.[4][5]
On the Main Stage, a group of 1-4 players will choose a selection of available songs, attempting to time button inputs correctly to the notes of the current song. The players' scores and combo multipliers increase with accurate inputs.[2] The player can choose one of fourdifficulty levels, ranging from easy to expert.[4][5] While the other difficulties only use four button inputs for notes, the expert difficulty uses five.[4] Additionally, "Pro" options are available for lead and bass, which take advantage of compatibleguitar controllers and feature different song layouts, introducinghammer-on andpull-off notes.[6] After correctly playing specially marked sections of each track, the player is granted "Overdrive", an ability that the player can activate to increase both their own and their squad's overall current score multiplier. If several players activate "Overdrive" at the same time, the overall squad score multipliers stack, but individual multipliers aren't affected.[2][7] This mode featuresonline multiplayer on all platforms, and local multiplayer on PlayStation and Xbox console versions, which was added to the game in January 2025.[8] Global score leaderboards are available on a per song, per instrument basis, resetting each season, while all-time leaderboards were added in a February 2025 update.[9]
In the Jam Stage, players are able to makemashups of several different songs they've acquired, incorporating one of four instrument stems from each track, with the tempo and key of each track being adjustable. This mode has gameplay similar toFuser, another game previously made by Harmonix. The versions of the songs used in this mode are known as "Jam Loops", and function as in-game emotes.[10] These "Jam Loops" can also be used inBattle Royale,[10]Creative,Unreal Editor forFortnite (UEFN),[11] andLego Fortnite.[12] Initially, this mode required up to four players to participate, each playing and modifying their contribution, and was expanded in April 2025 to allow single players to manipulate all four positions within the mashup.[13]
In the Battle Stage, added to the game in a June 2024 update, 16 players are pitted against each other to play up to four randomly-chosen songs in a battle to attain the highest score, with the lowest-scoring combatants being eliminated at the end of each song. Activating Overdrive in Battle Stage will allow players to target opponents with attacks to disrupt their scoring. At the end of the final song, the player with the highest score wins.[3]
A variety of songs are featured inFortnite Festival. These include ones from popular artists (e.g.Lady Gaga,Kendrick Lamar,Weezer), as well as original tracks composed byHarmonix and theEpic Games Sound Team.[10][14] While a rotating selection of daily free songs is provided to the player, they also have the option to purchase a song with V-Bucks,Fortnite's in-game currency. Each song costs 500 V-Bucks, equivalent to $4.50.[5][10] Songs are typically added to the game every week, with most weeks having three or more songs added.[15] Some songs can temporarily be obtainable for free by completing challenges, like "Holiday" byGreen Day, which was available in the summer of 2024.[16] Due to the dynamic approach to the song library, the developers can add songs at any time, such as the release of three singles fromBillie Eilish's albumHit Me Hard and Soft on the same day as its release in May 2024.[17]
Fortnite Festival features in-game "seasons," which are themed around specific featured artists and adjust in-game material accordingly. Seasons utilize abattle pass system called the Music Pass (formerly the Festival Pass), which allows players to unlock additional songs and cosmetics based on the season's featured artist.[18] For example, theMetallica season brought the songs "Nothing Else Matters" and "Enter Sandman" to the in-game shop, while "One" was initially exclusive to the Festival Pass.[19] Additional collaborations include skins and instruments based on theCoachella music festival in April 2024,[20] and a collaboration withFender that brought theFender Stratocaster andPrecision Bass to the shop in March 2024.[21] With the release of Season 6 in November 2024, the Festival Pass was rebranded as the Music Pass and made possible to level up in anyFortnite experience.[22]
| Season | Featured artist/band | Period |
|---|---|---|
| Season 1 | The Weeknd[1] | December 2023 – February 2024 |
| Season 2 | Lady Gaga[17] | February 2024 – April 2024 |
| Season 3 | Billie Eilish[17] | April 2024 – June 2024 |
| Season 4 | Metallica[23] | June 2024 – August 2024 |
| Season 5 | Karol G[24] | August 2024 – November 2024 |
| Season 6 | Snoop Dogg[25] | November 2024 – January 2025 |
| Season 7 | Hatsune Miku[26] | January 2025 – April 2025 |
| Season 8 | Sabrina Carpenter[27] | April 2025 – June 2025 |
| Season 9 | Bruno Mars[28] | June 2025 – August 2025 |
| Season 10 | Gorillaz[29] | August 2025 – October 2025 |
| Season 11 | Mashup (no featured artist)[30] | October 2025 – November 2025 |
| Season 12 | Lisa[31] | November 2025 – February 2026 |
| Season 13 | Chappell Roan[32] | February 2026 – April 2026 |

Fortnite Festival is developed byHarmonix, the developers of theRock Band series and the first fewGuitar Hero games.[2] The game was conceived as part of Epic's goal to expand the experiences withinFortnite, which includedLego Fortnite andRocket Racing.[1] According to Harmonix CEO Alex Rigopolous, their goal was to create a free-to-play rhythm game available to the millions of players ofFortnite, with songs freely available in a manner that allowed for dynamic and quick expansion to the in-game library, while also being favorable for music publishers in order to aid this.[33] Alongside the Festival Stage and Jam Stage, Harmonix also developed the "Patchwork" system, which could be used within user-madeFortnite Creative experiences or in Unreal Editor for Fortnite (UEFN) applications to allow creators to incorporate dynamic music systems into their creations.[33]Fortnite Festival was revealed on December 2, 2023, during an in-gameBattle Royale event titled the "Big Bang." A part of the event featuredEminem performing "Lose Yourself" as an in-game concert, with players able to perform the notes of the song as the first reveal ofFestival's gameplay.[34]
Festival was released on December 9, being the last game to be added toFortnite in 2023 afterLego Fortnite andRocket Racing.[1] It is available on the same platformsFortnite is available on, those beingAndroid,Nintendo Switch,PlayStation 4,PlayStation 5,Windows,Xbox One, andXbox Series X/S.[35] Support for plasticguitar controllers was confirmed to already be in progress with the release ofFestival.[1] Performance Designed Products (PDP), which previously supplied instrument controllers compatible withRock Band 4, announced a new controller forFestival in January 2024, the PDP Riffmaster. This was released in April 2024, and is available in two versions: one compatible for PlayStation consoles, and another for Xbox consoles & PC. Both versions are also compatible withRock Band 4, featuring the same button layout and basic mechanisms.[36]

With the start of Season 3 in late April 2024,Festival was updated to support the Riffmaster and a select few other guitar controllers, along with updating all past and future songs to include unique "Pro Lead" and "Pro Bass" parts that utilize the features of these controllers, similar toRock Band.[6] A May 2024 update later allowed players without guitar controllers to play these "Pro" tracks using standard controls.[7] The Battle Stage was added in a June 2024 update, alongsideMetallica content for the fourth season ofFestival.[23] On August 16, 2024Fortnite Festival became playable oniOS devices in the European Union.[37] In November 2024, Peripheral maker CRKD announced a new attachment for theirNeo S controllers, featuring five buttons that can be played as the note paths inFortnite Festival - similar to the peripheral used in theGuitar Hero: On Tour spinoffs for theNintendo DS.[38] CRKD later started production of compatible Les Paul-inspired guitar controllers for release in June 2025 in collaboration withGibson Guitars. Besides support forFortnite Festival,Guitar Hero, andRock Band, these controllers also come with support for open-source clonesClone Hero andYARG.[39]
For the one-year anniversary of the game's release in December 2024, Harmonix made almost all of the songs in-game playable for free for one weekend, while also releasing new "Platinum" editionFortnite outfits for The Weeknd, Lady Gaga, Billie Eilish, and Karol G.[40] Local multiplayer was added to the game with the release of the game's seventh season in January 2025.[8] In March 2025, an update to theFortnite item shop made it where only a select few songs would be purchasable at a given moment, rather than almost every song being available at any time as it was prior. It was also the announced that the frequency of new songs being added to the game would be altered. To coincide with this change, the daily selection of songs playable for free was increased to over 40.[41] This update was interpreted by many as taking advantage of players, giving them a "fear of missing out" (FOMO) whenever a song was in the item shop, as that song may not return for a while; on theTwitter post announcing this change, aCommunity Note stated that new item shop selections would be missing over two-hundred songs at once.[42]
Critics were divided onFestival's gameplay, with many pointing out it was similar to previous Harmonix games with few difference;[5][2]PC Gamer's Mollie Taylor believed that some song charts were repurposed from previous games.[4] Dustin Bailey ofGamesRadar+ wrote that the game had a "winning formula," believing that it worked well like previous Harmonix games that built up the formula for years. He stated that, while he foundLego Fortnite andRocket Racing to have more content,Festival was the one that "captured [his] heart" and where he looked forward to future content the most.[2] Conversely, Taylor described the game as "awfully barebones" compared to previous Harmonix games, believing there to be a lack of polish in certain areas and found the game to be unenjoyable when playing an instrument that a song didn't utilize well. Nevertheless, she described the game as a "great introduction", though one that needed more work.[4]IGN's Luke Reilly echoed similar thoughts to Taylor and Dustin, believing the lack of features from previous Harmonix games led to "isolating gameplay" that could makeFortnite players into rhythm game fans, but not vice versa.[5]
Responses towards in-game monetization were negative.[4][10][5] Taylor believed that, while the monetization was similar to other free-to-play games, it was still a turn-off.[4] Reilly thought similarly, believing it to be a predatory practice when compared to the average price of music oniTunes and the cost of songs inRock Band, describingFestival's pricing as "galling" when compared to the latter.[5]Digital Trends' Giovanni Colantonio felt that the monetization practices left him questioning if Epic Games bought Harmonix to make money off ofFortnite cosmetics, instead of their prior experience in making rhythm games.[10]
Reviewers were generally critical of the "Jam Stage" mode,[5][2][10] with Reilly believing it to be a "waste of effort entirely" that was negatively affected by the price of in-game content.[5] Dustin wrote that, while the inclusion of a "light version" ofFuser stood out, it typically left him wanting to quit playing after a few minutes.[2] Colantonio believed that the Jam Stage suffered from a lack of interactivity compared to the main game, as well as what he found to be the poor compatibility between songs. He wrote that the gameplay "[tended] to become an unmixed mess of tracks that don't fit together."[10]