21/12/2021 Ubisoft Quartz’s Ghost Recon NFTs Appear To Have Made Just $400 Total

Paul Tassi

News and opinion about video games, television, movies and the internet.

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Ubisoft

NFTs

Well, everyone sure did not seem to be on board with Ubisoft Quartzand its blockchain-based NFTs for Ghost Recon Breakpoint, a series of limited edition cosmetics that could be claimed in the game. But at least for now, it appears that it isn’t just gamers who don’t really care about them, it’s NFT collectors as well.

As pointed out by Apex Legends Senior Character Artist Liz Edwards on Twitter, the entire market for resold Ghost Recon Breakpoint NFTs appears to be just…$400 total.

Ubisoft Quartz partnered withTezosfor this project, and its currency, Tezons, reveals that the entire volume for Ubisoft Quartz right now is ꜩ 94.49 (Tezons). With the exchange rate of ꜩ1 to $4, that’s…just under $400 in total volume, and there appear to have only been 15 total sales of Ubisoft’s Breakpoint NFTs.

While Ubisoft was not trying to make money on these NFTs initially, it was more or less a proof of concept idea because it was giving all of them away for free, the complete and utter lack of a resale market seems to show there’s little interest in Breakpoint NFTs from either gamers or NFT collectors. NFTs obtain value from a bunch of NFT people believing they have value, so they sell and re-sell and balloon their price to extremely high levels. That simply isn’t happening with Ubisoft’s NFTs, it seems.

Why not?

On the gamer side, barely anyone cared. The concept of Ubisoft Quartz was roundly rejected by most gamers, so that leftmaybea small collection of die-hard Breakpoint players interested in claiming them. But two of the three NFTs required 100 and 600 hours of playtime respectively to claim, and apparently two of them were not even fully claimed by the time the clock ran out on the limited offering. The interest simply isn’t there. This seems like a combination of a general distaste for NFTs, the high playtime requirements, and the fact that this is Ghost Recon Breakpoint, hardly the most popular game in Ubisoft’s catalogue, two years after its launch.

ubisoft

Ubisoft Quartz

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On the NFT collector side, here’s a simple question that probably explains the lack of interest there. Why would you bother with NFTs in a video game you have probably never played nor heard of when you can find an infinite amount of speculative assets elsewhere? Why would an NFT enthusiast be interested in a Ghost Recon Breakpoint helmet that requires 600 hours of playtime to claim when you can look across a raft of sellers hawking cartoon sharks smoking blunts and such that are somehow worth tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars? Even if I’m trying not to dunk on NFTs here for once, the fact remains that there are plenty of NFT options out there that are much more accessible to collectors than these Breakpoint ones, so why would anyone on that side of the market bother with them? And it appears that no one is.

Recently, Ubisoft doubled down on the idea of NFTs, when CEO Yves Guillemot,questioned about the project, launched into a grand plans about web 3.0 and the metaverse, implying NFTs were only the beginning of Ubisoft’s push into that space. But we’ll see if the actual performance of Ubisoft Quartz alters that idea at all. Minus the actual dollar value of the Tezon market created here, Ubisoft has lost a lot of PR among gamers for this move, and appears to have gained little credit or interest from the crypto crowd at the same time. We’ll see what they do next after this…opening act.

Arts

https://www.forbes.com/sites/paultassi/2021/12/20/ubisoft-quartzs-ghost-recon-nfts-appear-to-have-made-just-400-total/?sh=3e14e174692f

Interesting NFTs
Mars House
Mars House is the first NFT digital house in the world. Upon purchase of Mars House NFT, 3D files will be sent to the new owner by Krista Kim Studio Inc. for file upload to the owner’s Metaverse. Technical support for Mars House integration on Metaverse is provided. (Architectural Digest, March 14, 2021) “Kim ventured into NFTs while exploring meditative design during quarantine; her hope was to use the influx of digital life as an opportunity to promote wellbeing. Comprised entirely of light, the visual effects of her crypto-home are meant to omit a zen, healing atmosphere. The artist also partnered with musician Jeff Schroeder of The Smashing Pumpkins to create a calming musical accompaniment. So what makes the file a compelling purchase? Beyond the promise of buying into the lucrative NFT market, the home and all of the furniture in it can be built in real life by glass furniture-makers in Italy, as well as through MicroLED screen technology. Kim also has a strong visions the art being projected, as well. “Everyone should install an LED wall in their house for NFT art.” says the artist. “ This is the future, and Mars House demonstrates the beauty of that possibility.” The owner is in agreement to the following terms and conditions upon purchase of Mars House (hereby referred to as Mars House NFT): The collector agrees to own one copy of Mars House NFT on a single Metaverse platform. The collector is required to register Mars House NFT ownership with Krista Kim Studio Inc. Krista Kim Studio Inc. will provide technical support to upload and integrate Mars House NFT on a Metaverse platform. If/when Mars House is resold, the collector is required to delete all Mars House NFT 3D file(s) from his/her Metaverse, and provide verification of deletion to Krista Kim Studio Inc. before new 3D files are transferred to the new owner by the artist. The new owner is required to register Mars House NFT ownership with Krista Kim Studio Inc. Krista Kim Studio will send Mars House NFT 3D files directly to the new owner and provide support for Metaverse integration. This verified ownership transfer system will be appointed to Krista Kim Studio Inc. trusteeship, after 40 years of the date of the sale. Krista Kim Studio Inc. retains ownership of Mars House NFT copyright. All rights reserved. All reproductions of Mars House (NFT) in both digital and physical formats, are restricted. Mars House NFT physical furniture pieces, made of tempered printed glass in Italy, may be commissioned by the collector as NFT physical pieces.
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Cypher::Prophet
Cypher::Prophet is an artwork dedicated to the punk origins of blockchain designed and realized by hackatao and hex6c. In the transposition into images we started from the iconographic canons of the hacker (hoodie, laptop, cryptographic elements) and associated them with the figure of the prophet, thus highlighting the predictive nature of the works of Eric Hughes (Cypherpunk Manifesto, 1988) and Timothy C. May (Crypto Anarchist Manifesto, 1993) as well as of the blockchain inventors Stuart Haber and Scott Stornetta (How to Time-Stamp a Digital Document, The Journal of Cryptography, 1991). Read the full story on https://medium.com/@hex6c/cypher-prophet-the-punk-origins-of-blockchain-1e8fce311e72
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By OthersideDeployer
Source Code for the WWW
OWNER: Sir Tim Berners-Lee Sir Tim Berners-Lee, b. 1955 Source Code for the WWW 1990-1991 Work includes: Original archive of dated and time-stamped files containing the source code, written between 3 October 1990 and 24 August 1991. These files contain code with approximately 9,555 lines, the contents of which include implementations of the three languages and protocols invented by Sir Tim; HTML (Hypertext Markup Language); HTTP (Hyper Transfer Protocol); and URIs (Uniform Resource Identifiers), as well as the original HTML documents that instructed early web users on how to use the application Animated visualization of the code being written (Video, black & white, silent), lasting 30 minutes 25 seconds A Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) representation of the full code (A0 841mm wide by 1189 mm high), created by Sir Tim from the original files using Python, with a graphic representation of his physical signature at lower right A letter written in the README.md file (in “markdown” format) by Sir Tim in June of 2021, reflecting upon the code and his process of creating it Non-fungible Token ERC-721 Minted on June 15, 2021, ed. 1/1 Smart Contract Address: 0x86ade256037d80d6d42df8df96d5be21cd25bd8f