Yeah, you need to take a few economics classes if you want to engage in discussions of such nature. This is just asinine.
The same goes for you. But I'll also add, that it absolutely is anti-consumer.
This isn't rocket science, so it really boggles the mind that I have to keep explaining this crap and you still don't understand such a simple concept.
Epic's business model is by very design anti-consumer and pro-corporate. It's not something that's up for debate or even something that Epic would dare to deny. The whole point of what they've been doing revolves around providing publishers with a better deal and in the process robbing consumers of choice to buy the product that they want in other places. How on god's green Earth is that not anti-consumer? If I, as a consumer, wanted to buy a game on Steam, but suddenly that game disappeared and the developer announced that their game would be available exclusively on Epic, because Epic paid for exclusivity, how is that not pro-corporate and anti-consumer? It goes directly against my interest as a consumer, and directly in the interest of the corporation.
If Epic wanted to be pro-consumer they would instead incentivize gamers to buy from their store front by offering them more than the competition, not by eliminating competition. They wouldn't rob consumers of choice by bribing developers and publishers not to release on Steam and other stores. It doesn't get simpler than that.