Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

Epic Games has filed its opening brief to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, seeking to overturn the previous ruling that Appleā€™s control over the iOS App Store does not qualify as a monopoly. The company first gave notice of it appeal in September, but Thursdayā€™s filing is the first time it has laid out its argument at length.

ā€œEpic proved at trial that Apple retrains trade…by contractually requiring developers to exclusively use Appleā€™s App Store to distribute apps and Appleā€™s IAP for payments for digital content within apps,ā€ the filing reads. ā€œIf not overturned, [the district court] decision would upend established principles of antitrust law and…undermine sound antitrust policy.ā€

Epicā€™s first legal challenge to Appleā€™s App Store restrictions came to a finish in September, when a district court ordered Apple to roll back some restrictions on in-app payments, but otherwise cleared the company of antitrust charges. A separate appeal from Apple has been filed to reverse the new in-app payment rules.

In her ruling, Judge Gonzales Rogers was particularly ambiguous on the question of whether Apple held monopoly power over the mobile gaming market. ā€œThe evidence does suggest that Apple is near the precipice of substantial market power, or monopoly power, with its considerable market share,ā€ she wrote in the decision. ā€œApple is only saved by the fact that its share is not higher, that competitors from related submarkets are making inroads into the mobile gaming submarket, and, perhaps, because [Epic] did not focus on this topic.ā€

In the appeals brief, Epic seems determined to revisit that question, and draw a clearer link between the iPhoneā€™s success as a mobile gaming platform and a potential monopoly case against Apple. ā€œThe district courtā€™s factual findings make clear,ā€ the filing alleges, ā€œthat Appleā€™s conduct is precisely what the antitrust laws prohibit.ā€

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