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Porsche and Fortnite logos appear over a blurred Fortnite-style background.
Credit: Epic Games / Porsche
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Fortnite x Porsche collab gets dragged after AI-looking art botches the basics

May 28, 2026·3 min read
Fortnite and Porsche had the kind of crossover that should have been easy to sell. A luxury car brand, a massive game, and an Unreal Engine-powered configurator is a clean fit on paper. Instead, the promotion went sideways because one concept image looked AI-generated and included mistakes fans spotted almost immediately.

The image showed a Porsche-themed setup, but the details were messy. The Porsche crest looked wrong, and a Riot Games-style logo appeared in the background despite Riot having no clear role in the collaboration. The image was later removed, turning a simple brand tie-in into another example of why players are tired of careless AI-looking marketing.

The real collab was not the issue

The brand has a Fortnite-themed background in its car configurator, with Unreal Engine powering the visual setup. That part makes sense for both companies because Epic’s tools are often used for interactive product showcases.

The problem came from the promotional image around it. For a brand like Porsche, small visual details matter. A distorted logo is not a tiny mistake when the whole point is presenting a polished car experience.

That is why players reacted so quickly. The artwork did not just look strange. It got basic branding wrong in a campaign built around a very recognizable brand.

The Riot logo made the image look even stranger

The oddest part was the extra logo in the scene. Players noticed what looked like Riot Games’ fist mark on a hot air balloon, which made the image feel even less carefully checked.

That detail raised more questions than the Porsche badge alone. Riot is not part of this Fortnite collaboration, so seeing its logo appear in the art made the image look like a loose AI mockup pulling from unrelated gaming references.

It also made the backlash easier to understand. Fans were not picking apart one tiny blur. They were looking at a promo image that seemed to mix up multiple brands in ways a finished campaign should have caught.

Epic says the image came from Porsche

Epic later said the concept image was supplied by Porsche and did not reflect the final configurator. That helps explain why it appeared, but it does not make the rollout look much better.

The image still ended up on an official Unreal Engine channel before being pulled. For players already wary of generative AI in game marketing, that was enough to make the promotion feel rushed and careless.

This is the part brands keep underestimating. Gaming audiences notice visual errors fast, especially when the work is tied to famous logos, major collaborations, and companies with the money to get the details right.

The final product now has to speak for itself

The Porsche configurator may still be a strong use of Unreal Engine, and the Fortnite tie-in may work fine once players see the actual experience. But the first conversation around it is now about the image that got removed.

It shifts attention away from the collaboration and toward the process behind it. For a crossover built around style, polish, and brand identity, the first rule should have been simple: make the Porsche logo look like Porsche.
Fortnite

Fortnite

Xbox Series X|SPlayStation 4Nintendo Switch 2

Released

June 29, 2020

Developer

Epic Games

Publisher

Epic Games

Systems
Xbox Series X|S
PlayStation 4
Nintendo Switch 2
Android
PC (Microsoft Windows)
iOS
PlayStation 5
Mac
Xbox One
Nintendo Switch

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