Epic Gaming is getting its day in court. The Fortnite developer's antitrust lawsuit against Apple (AAPL 0.64%) over its App Store fees and the tech giant's decision to boot the game developer from the platform is scheduled to begin this week.

Although Epic has a lot of support from other tech and gaming developers, who have chafed at the stiff slice of revenue Apple takes from every sale, at least one analyst doesn't think it will be much of a contest and sees Apple coming out on top.

Scene from Fortnite online game

A scene from Fortnite. Image source: Epic Gaming.

The legal challenge started when Epic devised a way for Fortnite players to bypass the App Store and make in-game payments directly to the game maker. That violated Apple's terms of service, since it takes upward of 30% of all revenue made from such purchases.

The response was swift and punitive: Epic was booted from the App store, which wiped out about 60% of the revenue it generated from players who use iOS to play Fortnite. Apple also removed its Unreal Engine, the game graphics engine, though a judge ruled Apple had to restore it since it was not part of the dispute. However, the judge also did not appear sympathetic to Epic's plight as he told the game developer its "predicament appears of its own making."

Wedbush analyst Daniel Ives says Apple will likely prevail on booting out Epic. He noted the tech giant has successfully defended the App Store in the past and will undoubtedly do so again. But if Epic does win, Ives said, it would be a "major gut punch" for Apple, which generated over $32.6 billion in services revenue last year, primarily from the platform.

Ives rates Apple as an outperform with a $185 share price target, some 39% above where the tech stock closed last Friday.