Brendan Greene, the creator of PUBG, says his upcoming metaverse could integrate blockchain technology — though he doesn’t seem to have any plans for NFTs.
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Brendan Greene, the creator of the online battle royale shooter PlayerUnkown’s Battlegrounds (PUBG) — who left the game’s development team in 2019 — has unveiled his plans to create a new generation of a gameplay-focused metaverse called “Artemis” — though non-fungible tokens (NFTs) are unlikely to make an appearance.
Speaking to IGN on Jan. 4, Greene said he’s “not even thinking about” including NFTs in the project, which is currently under development at his game studio PlayerUnkown Productions.
“Not even thinking about [NFTs].”
The crypto industry has consistently championed NFTs as the best way to secure IP and in-game assets across different gaming ecosystems, but Greene doesn’t appear to be buying the hype.
“Our concern is about getting the engine to a state that we can make things in it and then as I said, Game Two, we’ll test ideas then, but really now, not even thought about it. More just getting some fun games made.”
While NFTs are probably not showing up in Greene’s metaverse, he said it’s possible for blockchain technology to be integrated somewhere along the line.
“Blockchains are an interesting financial instrument, as a layer within a digital world […] maybe some future iteration of blockchain or hashgraph or that tech will be interesting,” said Greene.
“Ultimately, it’s a digital ledger, and if we can use a digital ledger, we’ll find the best one and use it. But that’s really it,” he added.
Greene said the metaverse had become a “dirty word,” dismissing the efforts of other metaverse creators of “[intellectual property] bubbles” of sub-par tech that failed to deliver on the hype.
“I want to build a metaverse because I don’t think anyone else is.”
“I think everyone’s building IP bubbles that might talk to each other at some stage in the future, maybe if we’re lucky, but it’s not the metaverse,” Greene said.
The three games of Greene’s metaverse
Greene says the final stage of his metaverse project will be called Artemis — which is actually the third game of three separate projects currently under development.
The first game, dubbed “Prologue,” is a realistic survival game built on a world-generation engine that’s trained on NASA data of Earth. The game is currently online for testing and is slated to launch in 2025.
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The second game — currently unnamed — will focus more on large-scale multiplayer worlds, with “millions” of characters across massive worlds. Both projects will be integrated into the final stage of Artemis.
Greene says the end goal of Artemis is to create a “3D internet” where players can create, modify, and engage in multiplayer gameplay across a swathe of different worlds.
“The Metaverse is a 3D internet. You should be able to create your own worlds and just have them all operating on the same protocol, like HTTP. So a world is a page, and that’s what I’m trying to do with Artemis.”
Greene added that the gameplay in Artemis would follow a similar structure to pre-existing games such as Minecraft and Star Trek Holodeck — focusing heavily on user-generated content and creativity.
Greene left the active development team of PUBG in March 2019 to focus on building out new games and tech in PUBG Special Projects and his spin-off gaming studio PlayerUnkown Productions.
The metaverse was one of the hottest narratives in both crypto and the wider tech scene between 2020 and 2022. During this period of time, several crypto projects rallied to monstrous valuations on the promise of delivering a functioning metaverse but have since fizzled out.
Meanwhile, Mark Zuckerberg re-branded his social media company and has since burned over $40 billion in the pursuit of creating a functional metaverse.
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This article first appeared at Cointelegraph.com News