Share with your team · Gaming
Share Epic Games 2FA with your team — without screenshots.
Most teams sharing Epic Games access do it badly: a screenshot in Slack, a personal phone in someone's drawer, a 1Password note that drifts out of date. Here's the right way.
The setup
Three minutes from sign-up to first Epic Games code.
- 01Sign up for Kaito. Free 14-day trial, no credit card. You'll set up MFA on your own account before adding any tokens.
- 02Add the Epic Games 2FA seed. In Kaito, go to Tokens → New and either scan the Epic Games 2FA QR code or paste the secret. Kaito auto-resolves the Epic Games icon.
- 03Choose who can see the code. Create a group (e.g. epic games-admins), add the relevant teammates, and grant the group code-only permission on the token.
- 04Generate the first code. Anyone in the group opens the token in Kaito and sees the current 6-digit code with a 30-second countdown ring. The view is logged immediately to the audit log.
Why this is better
The Epic Games screenshot in Slack vs. Kaito.
Screenshot in Slack
- • Searchable by everyone in the workspace
- • Replicated to every device anyone has logged Slack in on
- • Stays in DM history when teammates leave
- • No record of who used it when
- • Encodes the seed itself, valid forever
Epic Games via Kaito
- • Seed encrypted at rest, never sent to clients
- • Group-permissioned: only authorized teammates see the code
- • Auto-revoked when someone leaves the group
- • Every code view logged with user, IP, time
- • One-click rotation when needed
Compliance
Sharing forbidden for Epic Games
Epic Games's terms of service explicitly forbid account sharing. If you do need shared access for legitimate operational reasons, Kaito's per-user permissions and tamper-evident audit log give you a defensible record.
Stop pasting Epic Games codes in Slack.
Set up shared 2FA in Kaito in three minutes. Free 14-day trial, no card.