Microsoft invests in blockchain games with StarHeroes

Microsoft invests in blockchain games with StarHeroes

Microsoft has decided to invest in blockchain games and to do so it has subsidized Share heroesa shooter set in space.

Playing in third person, the user fights both alone and in multiplayer mode, either to climb the online leaderboard with players from around the world or in a single adventure.

Thanks to the investment from company founded by Bill Gateswill now join the video game Azure PlayFab multiplayer game server, along with successful games such as Forza Horizon, Sea of ​​​​Thieves and Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six Siege. In addition, the video game development team will be able to join Ubisoft.

Ubisoft has already made up its mind 2021 to enter the market for non-fungible tokens, especially based on Tezos blockchain, by including them in some of its video games as options for interested parties. A few months later, however, Ubisoft had tired that NFTs are not too well understood by players, who have not actually shown too much interest in this feature.

The StarHeroes development team has been working on the game for over two years and includes several former CD Projekt Red employees who worked on games such as The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt and Cyberpunk 2077.

Games to earn are of interest to Microsoft

SharHeroes is based on the very popular Web3 “Play and earn” concept, which means players can earn cryptocurrencies. This is one of the booming sectors of the NFT and blockchain industry. According to a Q2 2022 report published by Nonfungible.com, gaming is one of the fastest growing categories for the NFT world.

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Bill Gates vs. NFTs

The news of Microsoft’s investment comes after a few weeks that Bill Gates had declared that for him crypto and NFTs are stupid.

Specifically, in an interview with Yahoo Market, Bill Gates had explained in mid-July 2022 that in his view, cryptocurrencies and non-fungible tokens are based on the so-called most foolish theory, which is the one that claims that the price of an asset goes up only if the person who owns it is able to sell it back to someone more foolish than him, regardless of whether the asset is overvalued or not. When there are no fools to sell it back to, the price falls.

Based on this idea of ​​Microsoft’s founder, there was absolutely no expectation that his company would be interested in the industry.

However, Microsoft has actually been sponsoring blockchain development hackathons for years (see 2019 news item), but even more recently the company had financed The Palm startup that focuses precisely on NFTs. The company has also entered the metaverse sector with Microsoft Teams, where users will have the opportunity to have personal digital avatars and immersive spaces to meet each other precisely in the metaverse.


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