12/08/2022 More focus on fun, less on investment for upcoming NFT game

Illustration of video game character styled to look like Rambo and other action movie heroes Image: Mighty Bear Studios

Web3 gaming still has its upsides, if done right with more focus on game quality, veteran developer Simon Davis tells Axios.

Why it matters:The NFT/Web3/blockchain part of the games industry hasbillions of dollarsof investment but is surrounded by skeptics.

  • For some, a lack of hits — and players — is proof that the sector is a dead end, offering a technology that doesn’t inherently make games better.
  • For others, including Davis — whose company Mighty Bear just announced a$10 million investmentto make a Web3 game — that’s just proof it’s early days.

What they’re saying:“When we get the first genuinely world-class experience in Web3 with a low enough barrier to entry and a low level of friction, we'll be there,” Davis tells Axios.

  • Reminder:Web3 gaming is another way of saying gaming that is tied to cryptocurrencies. These games often involve the ability to buy and sell in-game items, characters and land in the form of non-fungible tokens, or NFTs.

Some key problemshold Web3 games back, Davis says.

  • Many such games assume everyone wants to get into crypto or cares about it, requiring sign-ups for wallets and acquiring tokens before you’re playing. The game from Davis’ team, a battle royale calledMighty Action Heroes, will let people access it as a standard free-to-play game, with the chance to play with NFT-based gear as an additional option.
  • NFT-based games tend to focus on their marketplace and draw players who are thinking of investment first, Davis has observed. “To me, that's not healthy,” Davis says, emphasizing the need for the players to have fun playing them.

Davis is hopefulthat Web3 could change the financing of games and even improve the dev-player relationship.

  • Teams making standard free-to-play games constantly need to turn out new content that they then pressure players to buy, he says. That “basically puts the studio in conflict with the players.” (Davis has worked in free-to-play for years).
  • For a Web3 game like his, Davis believes a team can forgo that model and sustain itself by taking a cut of sales of in-game items that players sell to each other. For his game, those items might be cosmetics or rewards otherwise earned through playing the battle royale’s seasons.
  • Could that be done without crypto, given years of experiments with in-game marketplaces in games such as Diablo? Davis argues that tracking transactions and divvying up profits are ideally done with Web 3 tech. “I could send a postcard instead of sending an email,” he said. “But it's not necessarily the best tool for it.”

What’s next:A playable build of Mighty Action Heroes should launch by year’s end.

Arts

https://www.axios.com/2022/08/11/nft-video-game-mighty-action-heroes

Interesting NFTs
The Harvest
An anthropomorphic figure stands, wide eyed, staring at the viewer; its body masculine, muscular, and humanoid. Its “mind” dissociates into a conglomerate of structures resembling feathers, grain, teeth–as well as a radial flower “node”, casting linear rays throughout the composition. To his left, a vat of bodies gesture and writhe in a kind of amniotic soup, attended by a video game robot. The bot's red display reads “uWu”. Behind the robot and filling the left side of the composition is an archaic figure composed of a variety of vintage objects and symbols. Among them are a hardbound book with ancient cuneiform scripts, indicating barley, beer, bread, ox, house, and sky, behind which is a grimacing, salivating jagged toothed maw; and an old Commodore floppy drive. The figure’s head tilts toward an illuminated crescent moon, suggesting the Egyptian Sacred Bull. The archaic figure is composed of a variety of mutating cells, which shift in color, and pattern; eventually breaking free into an ephemeral broadcast of bubbles which move across the background. The work came into being against a psychological introspection, which included associations to pop culture such as alien abduction and pod people, as well as quite a bit of reflection on grains as a symbol of civilization, agriculture, sustenance, life, and imbibing (mainly whiskies).
Another Day In Paradise
Just as the book speaks to intelligence, the image in all its muteness speaks to the heart.
Coffee Goblin
The Fight Club NFT collection is a compilation of 280 custom hand painted baseball bats with varying traits such as color and paint placement. Fight Club is created by Deconstructed Pop Artist Matt Gondek.
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By OthersideDeployer
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