After nearly a decade behind a paywall, Fortnite: Save the World is officially free-to-play. Epic Games flipped the switch on 16 April 2026, opening up the co-op PvE mode that originally launched Fortnite back in 2017, and throwing in a free skin, crossover quests with Battle Royale, and, for the first time, native support on Nintendo Switch 2.

Save the World now sits alongside Battle Royale, Zero Build, and the rest of Fortnite’s main modes in the Discovery section of the lobby, available to every Fortnite player at no cost.

What Save The World Actually Is

For anyone who only knows Fortnite as the battle royale phenomenon, Save the World is the game’s original identity. It’s a co-op survival shooter where up to four players take on objective-based missions across destructible open-world maps, building forts, setting traps, and fighting off waves of monsters called Husks.

Players pick from four hero classes, Soldiers, Constructors, Ninjas, and Outlanders, each with their own playstyle. The loop mixes scavenging, crafting, base-building, and combat, with a progression system that rewards levelling up heroes and weapon schematics over time.

It’s a very different game from Battle Royale, closer in spirit to tower defence mashed with a looter-shooter, and it predates the 100-player format that made Fortnite a household name.

How To Claim The Free Skin And Crossover Rewards

To celebrate the free-to-play move, Epic has rolled out a set of crossover quests that link Save the World with Battle Royale, and a handful of rewards up for grabs in both modes.

On the Battle Royale side, players can find the Jess NPC on the island and start a quest chain. Completing three of her quests unlocks the ability to purchase the Super Shredder weapon from her, limited to one per match. Finish 12 of her quests and the Super Shredder schematic becomes available to use in Save the World itself.

The headline reward is the Jess skin, which unlocks after earning 350,000 XP in Save the World. It’s usable across all of Fortnite once unlocked, so even players who only dabble in the PvE mode can carry the cosmetic back into Battle Royale.

Existing and returning Save the World players aren’t left empty-handed either. Epic is handing out thank-you rewards including superchargers, vouchers, and gold to long-time players on the same day the mode went free.

Save The World Platform Availability

The free-to-play launch has also brought Save the World to Nintendo Switch 2, marking the first time the mode has been playable on a Nintendo platform. That’s a notable addition given Save the World’s long-standing absence from the Switch family of systems.

Not every platform made the cut, though. The mode remains unavailable on the original Nintendo Switch, mobile devices, and cloud streaming services. Epic hasn’t indicated any plans to bring Save the World to those platforms, and re-engineering the mode for them would be a significant undertaking.

Here’s the full platform breakdown at launch:

PlatformSave the World Available
PlayStation 5Yes
PlayStation 4Yes
Xbox Series X|SYes
Xbox OneYes
Nintendo Switch 2Yes
PC (Epic Games Store)Yes
GeForce NowYes
Amazon LunaYes
Nintendo Switch (original)No
Mobile (iOS / Android)No
Cloud streaming (other)No

From $40 Flop To Free Mode

Save the World’s journey to free-to-play is a strange one. When Fortnite launched in July 2017, Save the World was the entire game, sold at a $40 price tag with an early access label. Sales were disappointing, and Epic pivoted fast, building a free battle royale mode on top of the same tech in a matter of weeks. That spin-off exploded, eclipsed its parent mode within months, and turned Fortnite into the cultural juggernaut and de facto metaverse it is today.

Save the World, meanwhile, stayed paid, and over the years faded into the background. It kept a committed player base, particularly among those who used it to grind battle pass XP, but it rarely made headlines and received limited content updates compared to Battle Royale’s relentless release cadence.

Dropping the paywall nine years later effectively reframes the mode as a side offering bundled into the free Fortnite ecosystem, rather than a standalone product that has to justify its price tag.

The Bigger Question: What Happens Next

The move opens Save the World up to the biggest audience it’s ever had, but the future of the mode is less clear. Epic conducted major layoffs in March, and maintaining Save the World, let alone expanding it with new story missions, maps, or major features, is resource-intensive work on an ageing codebase.

Whether Epic invests in new content will likely hinge on how many of Fortnite’s hundreds of millions of players actually stick with Save the World now that there’s no cost barrier. A sustained wave of new players could justify fresh development. A quick spike followed by drop-off probably won’t.

For now, the door is open. Anyone with Fortnite installed can boot up Save the World, pick a hero class, and find out whether the mode that started it all still has a place in 2026.