22/07/2022 Final Fantasy NFTs Coming to Polkadot in Square Enix, Enjin Alliance

Enjin’s Polkadot-based Efinity platform will power NFT collectibles and more for the smash role-playing video game franchise.


Square Enix is the publisher of the smash hit Final Fantasy series. Image: Square Enix
Square Enix is the publisher of the smash hit Final Fantasy series. Image: Square Enix

One of the most successful video game series of all time is set to receive theNFTtreatment in 2023, as Japanese publisher Square Enix has partnered with blockchain gaming firm Enjin to release NFTs based on the Final Fantasy franchise.

The NFTs won’t be purely digital products, however. They’re tied to physical action figures and trading cards based on the smash role-playing game (RPG) Final Fantasy VII to commemorate the original PlayStation game’s 25th anniversary.

Square Enix will first release packs of physical trading cards in spring 2023 that will sell for $4 per six-card pack. Each comes with a code to redeem for a single NFT trading card minted by Enjin on its Efinity platform, which is built on thePolkadotblockchain.

In November 2023, the publisher will release a limited edition action figure of the game’s star, Cloud Strife. Both the standard figure and “Digital Plus Edition” will come with a code to redeem an NFT certificate of authenticity, but only the latter comes with an additional NFT: a digital replica of the physical toy. The standard figure will sell for $130, with the Digital Plus Edition at $160.

The Efinity blockchain runs on Polkadot as a parachain, or a dedicated subnet of sorts, that’s part of the overall Polkadot ecosystem. Polkadot uses a proof-of-stake consensus model that does not require energy-intensive mining, unlike the leading NFT platform,Ethereum.

Enjin CTO Witek Radomski toldDecryptthat the firm first worked with Square Enix several years ago, hosting websites for online guilds that play Final Fantasy XIV.

However, this new partnership comes amid growing interest in blockchain tech and NFTs for Square Enix. Final Fantasy—which has sold 168 million games worldwide since 1987, per the company—is its crown jewel.

“They were looking at all kinds of blockchains, testing them out,” said Radomski. He added that Square Enix sought a platform that could “meet the needs of gamers,” including considerations like low transaction costs and energy efficiency.

An NFT is a blockchain token that works like a proof of ownership for an item, including both digital and physical goods. NFTs are often used for things like digital artwork, profile pictures, collectibles, and interactive video game items, and the NFT marketsurged to $25 billionworth of trading volume in 2021 alone.

Square Enix has ramped up its blockchain and NFTs endeavors over the last couple years. Itinvested in the Ethereum-based metaverse gameThe Sandbox in 2020, and earlier this year announced plans tobring its Dungeon Siege franchiseto the NFT-powered game world.

Final Fantasy Maker Square Enix Backs Bitcoin Gaming Startup Zebedee in $35M Round

While a lot of crypto gaming activity is taking place in the Ethereum and Solana ecosystems, Zebedee has consistently banged the drum for Bitcoin over the last couple years.

The firm also released NFT collectibles in Japan last year based on its Million Arthur game series, using theLINE blockchain platform. Earlier this year, Square Enix presidentwrote positively of the potential benefitsof NFTs and tokenized economies, noting interest in “play-to-contribute” experiences in which players benefit financially from a game’s growing success.

More recently, Square Enix sold off a slate of major franchises (including Tomb Raider) and three of its game studiosfor $300 million, in part to finance its growing crypto industry endeavors. Just yesterday, Square Enix was announced asan investor in Bitcoin gaming startup Zebedee, which raised a $35 million Series B round.

Radomski said that Square Enix has been “very measured” in its approach to the NFT initiative with Enjin, seeking to streamline the process for gamers who may be encountering NFTs for the first time. “That lets us adapt our products even more,” he toldDecrypt. “It’s been amazing.”

Enjin’s evolution

Enjin, which has also partneredwith MicrosoftandSamsung, is arguably best known for its work in the Ethereum ecosystem. Enjin Coin (ENJ) is an ERC-20 token, and Radomski authored Ethereum’s ERC-1155 multi-token NFT standard. But the firm gradually saw that Ethereum’s low transaction throughput and surging fees would limit game developers.

“Back in 2018, I realized that Ethereum was going to have some limits at some point, even though the fees back then were like a penny,” he said. “We can't run millions of transactions. We can't run thousands of games on Ethereum because it'll just be too much.”

Radomski said that Enjin explored the potential of scaling solutions that could be ideal for gaming and collectibles, but ultimately decided that it didn’t want to build something from scratch. Instead, the team opted to build Efinity on Polkadot, which he said was alluring as a “framework for blockchains” that lets builders customize as they see fit.

“Everything that we’re launching now [on Efinity] is like a gen-two of everything we’ve built,” he explained.

Along with shifting to Polkadot, Radomski said that Enjin is changing the way that it operates. Instead of a software-as-a-service (SaaS) style model in which Enjin hosts content in partnership with game developers, the firm is letting creators use the open Efinity platform to deploy their own infrastructure and build NFT-powered games.

“That’s been the dream for the last five years,” he said, “and now it’s finally coming out.”

Efinity lives on a Polkadot parachain, but Enjin plans to expand cross-chain functionality and bridge to other blockchains. Bridging to Ethereum is on the horizon, Radomski said—so these Final Fantasy NFTs could be transferable to Ethereum by the time they launch. Other blockchains that support the Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) may also be added.

NFT gaming growth

Radomski thinks it’s only beneficial for NFT gaming to see major publishers like Square Enix andUbisoft playing in the space. These Final Fantasy NFTs aren’t designed to be used within any game, but Square Enix haspreviously signaled interestin creating NFT-powered games with tokenized economies.

Such publishers are building on the backs of indie creators that have experimented with blockchain technology in recent years for NFT-powered games, sometimes with enormous success—as in the case of the Ethereum-powered play-to-earn game,Axie Infinity.

However, NFTs have alsodrawn the ire of vocal gamers, in part due to the environmental impact of some platforms, as well as scams and rampant speculation. For some gamers, the issue is also that some NFT-powered games are focused on earning tokens, rather than having fun. That’s a perception that veteran game developers can potentially help shift.

“Gamers have to be shown that developers want to use these things responsibly in interesting ways to enhance gameplay,” Radomski said, “not just as a monetization mechanism.”

Enjin has been in conversations with “various AAA," or major, publishers of late, he added. Such studios not only have experience building polished games for the masses, but they’re also well capitalized. They don’t need to sell NFTs simply to fund game development. That could potentially lead to stronger games that utilize blockchain tech for new kinds of experiences.

“It's going to take another year or two to see more of these games coming out that use NFTs in interesting ways,” he said. “But it's happening—people are thinking about this. I think the AAA [publishers] are going to show some innovation. They have the budget to actually be able to explore these interesting new concepts for NFTs.”

Arts

https://decrypt.co/105592/final-fantasy-nfts-coming-to-polkadot-in-square-enix-enjin-alliance

Interesting NFTs
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
CryptoKitties
Hi-ya! I'm Kitty #59163. My friends describe me as ridiculous and voluptuous. I was voted school jock in college. It's pawesome to meet you!
Ringers #686
There are an almost infinite number of ways to wrap a string around a set of pegs. On the surface it may seem like a simple concept but prepare to be surprised and delighted at the variety of combinations the algorithm can produce. Each output from 'Ringers' is derived from a unique transaction hash and generated in Javascript in the browser. Feature variations include peg count, sizing, layout, wrap orientation, and a few colorful flourishes for good measure. Additional project feature(s) => Background: White, Size: Normal, Wrap orientation: Off-center, Wrap style: Weave, Peg layout: Recursive grid, Peg scaling: Uniform, Body: Yellow, Peg style: Solid, Extra color: Red, Peg count: 15
CryptoPunk 5577
By C352B5
#77075
By OthersideDeployer