Why are major global brands experimenting with NFTs in the Metaverse?

Published at: Nov. 14, 2021

Blockchain is a core technology that differentiates itself from other technologies by having solved the double expense with the emergence of the Bitcoin blockchain in 2008. Nonfungible tokens, or NFTs, were driven by blockchain technology which brought scarcity and interoperability to nonfungible tokens. But, what do blockchain technology and NFTs have to do with Metaverse? Why are large companies experimenting with NFTs in Metaverse?

The Metaverse

The term “metaverse” first appeared in 1992 when Neal Stephenson released his science fiction novel Snow Crash. In this book, humans interact with each other and with software agents such as avatars in a three-dimensional space that acts as a metaphor for the real world. While it was Stephenson who first used the term, the idea of a virtual reality-based successor to the internet was already being discussed by internet pioneers in the late 1970s and early 1980s who envisioned the internet of the future as a shared virtual space. A place where our physical world blends with the virtual and creates new digitized spaces somewhere in between.

In these spaces, the rules change. People become what they dream of in their everyday lives. They express their inner selves through digital avatars and can even bring their digital idols into this world. Now that the word “Metaverse” has gained traction in the mainstream, some have ventured into conceptualizing the metaverse.

But, defining the metaverse is still somewhat of a gamble. Just as in the early days of the internet many had no notion of what it would become, let alone that it would be used for business models like Uber, Amazon and Netflix. When people say that the Metaverse will be this or here, in my opinion, no one really has any idea of the exact size and breadth of the Metaverse, yet.

For those who still don’t understand what the Metaverse is, the movie directed by Steven Spilberg and based on the novel Ready Player One written by Ernest Cline is well worth checking out.

Related: Sci-fi or blockchain reality? The ‘Ready Player One’ OASIS can be built

Metaverse and Web 3.0

Two trends that will shape the world in the next 10-15 years are the Metaverse and its proliferation in all aspects of society and Web 3.0 and the democratization of the internet.

But, aren’t the Metaverse and Web 3.0 the same thing? Just as there is still no concrete definition for Metaverse, there is also no concept for what Web 3.0 is, both of which are still maturing.

Related: The Metaverse: Will it be a decentralized haven or a centralized tyranny?

However, it is already possible to identify some of the characteristics of Web 3.0 such as the focus on the user (and not on companies), the massive use of artificial intelligence (as a powerful tool to provide the best analysis and the best result to people), as well as distributed networks (we will no longer depend on the gigantic centralized data servers). Moreover, Web 3.0 content will be more graphical with more videos and 3D images. Also, in Web 3.0, augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR) will be commonplace, bringing more realistic graphics to applications and games.

Taking this into consideration, we can say that the Metaverse, still incipient, is being built in several spheres with the Web 3.0 being the biggest one.

It supports both games and social spaces like Second Life, one of the successful attempts to create a metaverse portal, but it cannot be said that the Metaverse is the Web itself.

Metaverse and NFTs

As we saw in the previous paragraphs, members of the tech community were already predicting an Exponential Age where the “internet of the future” would lead us to the Metaverse.

Well, the future is already knocking on the door, but until recently, it was not known how this space with several virtual worlds would reach its full potential. Could the Metaverse fundamentally transform not only the way people interact with the digital world but also alter part of the real world?

It is the integration of NFTs into the Metaverse that has initiated the transformation of our interactions in virtual worlds, impacting part of the real world. Gucci has sought to reach new consumers in the Metaverse in the game Roblox. The strategy used is to sell NFTs for avatars of the limited edition “Gucci Collection” in the Roblox game which includes bags, glasses and hats.

In July this year, Coca-Cola launched branded virtual clothing as nonfungible tokens, including a “wearable” jacket to be worn on avatars within the virtual world of Decentraland, even hosting a Rooftop Party on the platform to celebrate the launch. Now in November, NASCAR will launch a digital car on the Jailbreak breakout game platform Roblox and sell clothing for players’ avatars. Players will also be able to create their own NASCAR uniforms as part of a fan contest with the game’s developers acting as influencers to promote them on social media.

NFTs are the gateway to many parties in the Metaverse

Last quarter, several global brands created their own NFTs and launched their nonfungible tokens into virtual worlds. The reason?

There are so many eyeballs and interactive opportunities. At Roblox, more than 200 million monthly active users, with about half who are under 13, play hundreds of thousands of virtual games, many of which now incorporate brand activations. WarnerMedia’s Wonder Woman: The Themyscira Experience has been visited nearly 30 million times on the platform. And, what’s interesting about this initiative is that it reflects the trend of companies meeting their consumers where they are.

As Coca-Cola and Gucci show us, regardless of the product or the company’s mission statement, all companies should be thinking about betting on this new sphere. Although now, the metaverse is still very nascent, and brands are still at the beginning of their own digital transformation, NFTs are proving to be a great gateway for various brands to experience many parts of the Metaverse such as how digital ownership works, the impacts of migrating part of the economy to the Metaverse and user behavior, among others.

Related: New industry, new rules: Building the Metaverse without bias

The new face of NFTs with blockchain technology

NFTs are the representation of a nonfungible asset in digital media. In a more technical definition, an NFT is a piece of software code that verifies that you hold ownership of a nonfungible digital asset, or the digital representation of the nonfungible physical asset in digital media.

It’s important to notice that NFTs existed before the first blockchain, but blockchain technology has transformed NFT markets by solving the double-spending problem and conferring scarcity, uniqueness and authenticity to a nonfungible token.

Hence, if registered on a blockchain, an NFT becomes truly a “unique” asset that cannot be counterfeited, tampered with, or defrauded. Blockchain technology has brought standardization to basic attributes of NFTs such as ownership, transfer and access control, and to additional attributes such as specifications on how to claim an NFT, for example. Standardization of NFTs via blockchain technology has also enabled interoperability, allowing NFTs to move more easily between various ecosystems.

Since 2017, NFTs can be instantly viewable across dozens of different wallet providers, tradable across multiple markets and required across multiple virtual worlds because the open standards enabled by blockchain technology provide a clear, consistent and trusted API with permission to read and write data.

Interoperability, on the other hand, has extended the tradability of NTFs by allowing them to be traded outside their original environments and in any currency — from stablecoins and digital currencies to cryptocurrencies. And this advantage of negotiability has also brought about a transition from an initially closed NFT economy to a free market economy. Because of this, the NFT market, previously closed and restricted to the platform on which they were created, has become a free market with trading in the real world and, recently, also in virtual worlds.

While many still see NFTs as a passing fad, industry leaders have realized that the incorporation of blockchain technology to NFTs and its integration into the Metaverse is the missing piece for the creation of a “Functional Metaverse.” A fully functional metaverse is one with the potential to fundamentally alter the way people interact with and transcend the digital world, merging it with the real world.

It is a true collective virtual experience capable of reinventing not only the creative industry by opening new doors for creators, players and artists, but also providing for the physical world to integrate with the digital world.

Looking at where we were in the early days of the internet, where we are and, more importantly, where we are going, we realize that the inevitability of shared virtual spaces, resignifying our public and private lives.

And you, have you ever bought an NFT in a virtual world? Can you identify, from what we have seen here, how NFTs and the Metaverse can impact or affect your daily life? Think about this until our next meeting.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Tatiana Revoredo is a founding member of the Oxford Blockchain Foundation and is a strategist in blockchain at Saïd Business School at the University of Oxford. Additionally, she is an expert in blockchain business applications at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and is the chief strategy officer of The Global Strategy. Tatiana has been invited by the European Parliament to the Intercontinental Blockchain Conference and was invited by the Brazilian parliament to the public hearing on Bill 2303/2015. She is the author of two books: Blockchain: Tudo O Que Você Precisa Saber and Cryptocurrencies in the International Scenario: What Is the Position of Central Banks, Governments and Authorities About Cryptocurrencies?
Tags
Nft
Related Posts
2021 ends with a question: Are NFTs here to stay?
In her monthly Expert Take column, Selva Ozelli, an international tax attorney and CPA, covers the intersection between emerging technologies and sustainability, and provides the latest developments around taxes, AML/CFT regulations and legal issues affecting crypto and blockchain. On Nov. 14, Tezos-based nonfungible token (NFT) marketplace Hic Et Nunc — which in Latin means “here and now” — abruptly shut down. Artists became worried about their NFTs on exhibit at the Hermitage Museum’s first-ever NFT exhibition, “Ethereal Aether” (Nov. 10 to Dec. 10), as well as Art Basel Miami’s first-ever NFT exhibition, “Humans + Machines: NFTs and the Ever-Evolving World …
Decentralization / Dec. 4, 2021
SXSW 2022 showcased immersive NFT experiences, lacking crypto and Bitcoin sessions
South by Southwest — commonly referred to as “South By” or “SXSW” — has returned to Austin, Texas this year to showcase the latest trends in interactive media, music, art, film and technology. While SXSW runs through March 20, 2022, the entertainment and technology festival kicked off its first weekend with a large focus on Web3 and nonfungible tokens (NFTs). NFT activations and panels SXSW’s attendees’ interest in NFTs and the future of the internet was particularly evident at the venue hosted by Blockchain Creative Labs (BCL) — a business and creative unit formed by FOX Entertainment in 2021. On …
Decentralization / March 20, 2022
The creator economy will explode in the Metaverse, but not under Big Tech’s regime
In his monthly crypto tech column, Israeli serial entrepreneur Ariel Shapira covers emerging technologies within the crypto, decentralized finance (DeFi) and blockchain space, as well as their roles in shaping the economy of the 21st century. With the news that Meta plans to take a nearly 50% cut of virtual asset sales in Horizon Worlds, it will not be surprising if independent artists and content creators turn away from the Metaverse entirely. Or at least from its Meta rendition, no matter how excited the company might be about the creator economy. It’s one thing to pay this much when the …
Decentralization / May 4, 2022
Blockchain and NFTs are changing the publishing industry
Web3 has become the most sought-after investment sector of 2022, as use cases for nonfungible tokens (NFTs), the Metaverse and other blockchain applications come to fruition. Therefore, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that different segments of the publishing industry have begun to use Web3 technologies to transform traditional models. For example, the textbook publishing giant Pearson recently announced plans to use NFTs to track digital textbook sales to capture revenue lost on the secondary market. Time magazine, which was founded 99 years ago, has also been using NFTs to create new revenue streams, along with a sense of community …
Decentralization / Aug. 9, 2022
Redeeming physical NFTs: Easier said than done?
Despite the crypto winter, nonfungible tokens (NFTs) continue to draw interest. This has become apparent as many brands and retailers have started to offer digital NFTs attached to physical products. Known as “phygitals,” these offerings allow real-world products to be tied to digital NFTs. For example, RTFKT — a digital fashion and collectible company — recently launched a project called Cryptokicks iRL. According to sources, RTFKT is creating digitally-designed sneakers backed by a physical product. RTFKT’s official Twitter account recently tweeted that Lace Engine NFT holders will be able to reserve a pair of Cryptokicks iRL, which can then be …
Decentralization / Jan. 5, 2023