PC Gamer reports that the Fortnite Token first appeared at the end of last year. Given its name and the big F it uses for a logo, you’d be forgiven for thinking there was an official affiliation with the game itself. But no; the creators describe it as a fan-created project “with no specified owner or company structure behind it.” On May 29, the Fortnite Token team invited people to mint NFT tokens to sell on the OpenSea site. It seems that Sweeney noticed or was informed of the tweet yesterday, replying with “This is a scam.” The Fortnite Token developers weren’t put off by criticism from the Epic Games boss. “Fortnite Token isn’t a scam cryptocurrency project,” they replied. “Instead, this is a fair-launch, community-driven, Fortnite game fans-created cryptocurrency project with no specified owner or company structure behind it or a CEO deciding on its future.” Sweeney, whose willingness to engage in a Twitter war rivals Elon Musk, hit back with an explanation most people would have thought was pretty obvious: “That’s not how trademarks and copyrights work though,” he wrote. “You can’t use the Fortnite name and images without permission to market an unrelated product.” Sweeney followed up by confirming there is no Fortnite cryptocurrency, adding an ominous (for the Fortnite Token devs) warning that Epic’s lawyers are “on it.” He also blasted crypto markets for allowing these types of copyright-infringing tokens. Sites selling NFTs have long had a problem with shady digital tokens: Cent suspended transactions over a flood of counterfeit digital assets earlier this year, and a slew of unofficial tokens featuring the likeness of YouTube stars and influencers hit OpenSea around the same time. All this doesn’t mean Sweeney is entirely against the technology. Valve famously banned blockchain games from Steam last year, which led to its rival’s CEO confirming the Epic Games Store will allow them on its storefront. However, he did add that Epic wouldn’t be using crypto in its own titles.