¡ 7 min read
Navigating Web3: What does it mean for Game Developers?
Nikolaj Ahlberg-Pedersen
CPO at GameAnalytics
If you read tech news, youâve probably stumbled on the term Web3. And you might be wondering what it means and how it could affect gaming. So letâs explore Web3 and the surrounding opinions.
What is Web3?
Itâs all about ownership. The web has been going through gradual changes, ever since it launched. Web1 was where people uploaded websites with static pages and information. You simply read Web1. The next step was Web2, where users create their own content.
Web3 is a prediction that users will begin to own digital content and have control over how they use it. But itâs also about decentralizing that ownership: making sure it’s not tied to any particular platform. (You donât just own a movie on one platform, you own the right to watch it anywhere, for example.)
âI was lucky enough to be a part of the generation of Web2, building a company like Reddit, that proved and just showed a model for the world of read and write,â Alexis Ohanian, co-founder of Reddit explained in a talk with Bloomberg. âNow what weâre seeing, this whole Web3 jargon, is really just about a third component, which is the ownership part. And weâre just starting to see that, whether itâs with gaming or NFTs or this infrastructure that now exists that let you benefit from a sense of ownership.â
Theoretically, it doesnât matter how users gain ownership over their digital content. But most experts agree that the blockchain (and specifically NFTs) are the first signs that itâs coming. (Have a look at how Axie Infinity have been using Blockchain for their game.)
So what do blockchain and NFT mean?
It needs to be secure if we see any level of control or ownership. Thatâs where blockchains (and the NFTs build on that technology) could come in.
- Blockchains can be seen as public databases. Every blockchain has a âledger,â and they record every transaction. This ledger is shared on everyoneâs machines, so it canât be faked. There are other technical reasons that make blockchain secure, but we wonât get into them here. (This is how cryptocurrencies work.)
- NFTs are the âdeedsâ to a digital thing. It stands for ânon-fungible token.â Which just means a token thatâs completely unique. And itâs technically proof that you own a thing. NFTs run on the blockchain, so you always know who owns which NFT.
How might this work in gaming?
Itâs impossible to tell exactly how gaming will change. But, theoretically, the blockchain could give players ownership over many different assets. Players could own the game itself, items within the game, or currencies in the game.
Itâs the decentralization that matters here, though. Itâs not just about owning a cosmetic skin in a single game, itâs about being able to trade that skin like a real commodity. Or even use that skin in another game. (Though, that would need a level of cooperation between developers thatâs highly unlikely.)
But Twitterâs founder and CEO, Jack Dorsey, doesnât believe that Web3 gives as much control as you might think. âYou donât own âweb3,ââ Dorsey tweeted. âThe VCs and their LPs do. It will never escape their incentives. Itâs ultimately a centralized entity with a different label.â
It wonât all be sunshine and rainbows
Thereâs a big difference between what could happen and what will happen. Sure, the idea is to have one central place with all your digital assets, from music to individual game items. And that youâd be able to use them in any game. From a playerâs perspective, thatâs very exciting.
But practically, itâll likely be more fragmented than that. Companies will still need to cooperate to make it work. For example, a game developer could theoretically allow a player access to any âmeta skin.â Or perhaps allow you to use in-game currencies from another game. But how many developers will support that?
If itâs going to happen, the industry will need to release a lot of standards to make it easy for developers to incorporate their playerâs digital assets into their games. Itâs theoretically possible to add a setting to your game where players could play the soundtrack from another game, for example. But would you want to? Would you want them using currency they earnt from a competitor?
Weâve seen this before, and it failed
Back in 2012, there was a cloud-based service called Ultraviolet. The idea was to be a single locker that housed your digital right to watch a movie. Quite a few studios agreed to honor the system so that users could buy a movie once and be able to claim the right to watch it on any device.
But the service died out in 2019. Who knows whether it was a problem in their marketing, resistance from some of the leading movie giants, or just bad luck. Perhaps it was just too early. But, either way, it meant that users lost those rights. And that they never truly own anything.
There are interesting trends in gaming, though
While there have been failures in the past, it seems that the gaming industry is beginning to dabble and dip their toes in web3-Esque concepts:
- Midnight Society. The famous influencer, Dr. Disrespect, has created a new game studio. One aspect is that people who buy a âFounders Passâ will get what appears to be a custom avatar that âcan be traded and collected on open marketplaces.â
- Gods Unchained. This title comes from the former game director of Magic: The Gathering Arena. In it, you can earn cards as you play and then sell them on the marketplace for cryptocurrency.
- Steam. Not quite there, but it already has the Community Market. You can sell items from different games there. However, this isnât quite web3 yet: you canât withdraw those funds. But it could be a start.
- Lost Lore Studio. Full disclosure, these guys have been using our technology to track in-game events for a while now. But theyâre worth mentioning. Their game, Bearverse, shows what could happen as it lets players earn NFTs and trade them for cryptocurrency.
The game still needs to be good
While these examples seem to show the beginnings of Web3-like games and show us what the future could look like, there are words of warning worth bearing in mind.
âToo many times, our ecosystem has tried to build out NFT-enable games, but forgotten the first step, which is to build a great game,â Sam Bankman Fried, CEO of FTX, tweeted. âAnd just as importantly, web3 should make a game better, not neutral or worse. If integrating crypto hurts a game, we don’t want to do it.â
We can still help you track events
If youâre interested in trying out Web3 concepts for your game, you can still use our analytics to track how itâs going. We exist to help you make better games and monetize them efficiently. Blockchain shows some promise in monetizing your game, so if you need to track the progress, weâll be here to help.