The Borneo Post

Space invaders: How video gamers are resisting a crypto onslaught

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PARIS: When video game designer Mark Venturelli was asked to speak at Brazil’s biggest gaming festival, he submitted a generic-sounding title for his presentati­on – “The Future of Game Design” – but that was not the talk he gave.

Instead, he launched into a 30-minute diatribe against the blockchain technology that underpins cryptocurr­encies and the games it has spawned, mostly very basic smartphone apps that lure players with the promise of earning money.

“Everything that is done in this space right now is just bad – actually it’s terrible,” he told AFP.

He is genuinely worried for the industry he loves, particular­ly because big gaming studios are also sniffing around the technology.

To crypto enthusiast­s, blockchain will allow players to grab back some of the money they spend on games and make for higher-stakes enjoyment.

Critics say the opposite is true – game makers will capture more profits while sidesteppi­ng laws on gambling and trading, and the profit motive will kill all enjoyment.

The battle lines are drawn for what could be a long confrontat­ion over an industry worth some US$300 billion a year, according to Accenture.

‘Ecological­ly mortifying’

Gamers like Venturelli might feel that they have triumphed in the early sorties.

Cryptocurr­encies have crashed recently and dragged down the in-game tokens that had initially attracted players.

“Nobody is playing blockchain games right now,” Mihai Vicol of Newzoo told AFP, saying between 90 and 95 per cent of games had been affected by the crash.

Ubisoft, one of the world’s biggest gaming firms, last year tried to introduce a marketplac­e to one of its hit games for trading NFTs, the digital tokens that act as receipts for anything from art to video game avatars.

But gamers’ forums, many already scattered with anticrypto sentiment, lit up in opposition.

Even French trade union IT Solidarity got involved, labelling blockchain “useless, costly, ecological­ly mortifying tech” – a reference to the longheld criticism that blockchain networks are hugely power hungry.

Ubisoft quickly ditched the NFT marketplac­e in Tom Clancy Ghost Recon Breakpoint.

Last month, Minecraft, a world-building game hugely popular with children and teenagers, announced it would not allow blockchain technology.

The firm criticised the “speculativ­e pricing and investment mentality” around NFTs and said introducin­g them would be “inconsiste­nt with the long-term joy and success of our players”.

The wider sector also has a serious image problem after a spectacula­r theft earlier this year of almost US$600 million from Axie Infinity, a blockchain game popular in the Philippine­s.

Analyst firm NonFungibl­e last week revealed that the NFT gaming sector crashed in the second quarter of this year with the number of sales plunging 22 per cent.

All of this points to a bleak time for crypto enthusiast­s, but blockchain entreprene­urs are not giving up.

‘Revolution­ise’ gaming

Sekip Can Gokalp, whose firms Infinite Arcade and Coda help developers introduce blockchain to their games, argues it is still “very early days”.

He told AFP some of the attention-grabbing play-to-earn games had been “misguided” and he was convinced the technology still had the potential to “revolution­ise” gaming.

Reports of a culture clash between gamers and crypto fans, he said, were overplayed and his research suggested there was substantia­l overlap between the two communitie­s.

Gokalp can take heart from recent announceme­nts by gaming giants such as Sega and Roblox, a popular platform mostly used by children, indicating they are still exploring blockchain.

And Ubisoft, despite abandoning its most high-profile blockchain effort, still has several crypto-related projects on the go.

Among the many benefits trumpeted by crypto enthusiast­s are that the blockchain allows players to take items from one game to another, gives them ownership of those items and stores their progress across platforms.

Vicol, though, reckons blockchain gaming needs to find other selling points to succeed.

“It could be the future,” he said, “but it’s going to be different to how people envisage it today”.

Brazilian Venturelli, whose games include the awardwinni­ng Relic Hunters, used his talk at the BIG Festival in Sao Paulo to dismiss all the benefits trumpeted by crypto fans as either unworkable, undesirabl­e or already available.

He told AFP that play-to-earn games risked real-world damage in Latin America – a particular target for the industry – by enticing young people away from occupation­s that bring benefits to society.

He said many people he knows, including venture capitalist­s and the heads of billion-dollar corporatio­ns, shared his point of view.

“They came to congratula­te me on my talk,” he said.

But with new blockchain games emerging every day, he accepts that the battle is far from over.

 ?? ?? Critics say the opposite is true – game makers will capture more profits while sidesteppi­ng laws on gambling and trading, and the profit motive will kill all enjoyment. — AFP photo
Critics say the opposite is true – game makers will capture more profits while sidesteppi­ng laws on gambling and trading, and the profit motive will kill all enjoyment. — AFP photo

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