
Xpring, ’s grant network for developers last May, is stepping into the $140 billion global gaming industry.
The project has partnered with the gaming startup Forte to create a $100 million fund to support game developers, the companies announced on Tuesday.
According to a report in the Verge, all of the money and Forte will manage the fund, which aims to accelerate mainstream of technology in gaming.
Forte’s tech leverages “open-source solutions designed in collaboration with ,” the says. These solutions include the open-source Interledger Protocol, the Codius platform (created for but described here as a “container-based hosting solution”) and the use of the XRP for settlements.
“ technology has the potential to improve game designs and help developers run better and more successful game economies, but for many developers it’s difficult to develop and deploy,” the companies’ press release says. “Forte’s platform makes it easy for developers to apply technology to their games, increasing engagement and monetization with their players.”
The fund is primarily targeting “game developers operating live game economies with over 50,000 daily active users,” the release adds.
“We are thrilled to partner with such a world-class team of game industry veterans,” Ethan Beard, senior vice president of Xpring, said in a statement, referring to Forte’s founding team from such gaming companies as Kabam, Unity, and GarageGames.
“Both Forte and have a shared belief that technology will have a massive impact on games, and that providing tools that are easy-to-use, chain agnostic and interoperable is a necessary step in driving scale consumer ,” he added.
Founded in February 2019, San-Francisco-based Forte was supported by such investors as a16z crypto, Andreessen Horowitz, Battery Ventures, Canaan Partners, Ventures, 1confirmation, and others, the announcement says.
“ technologies’ key innovations unlock vast potential for nearly all forms of digital interaction. Gaming is a $140 billion global industry driven predominantly by digital micro-transaction economies, which we believe will benefit immensely from the integrity and resilience of technology,” Brett Seyler, chief platform officer at Forte, said in a statement. “The industry needs solutions that can support these economies at scale with cross-chain interoperability.”
CEO Brad Garlinghouse, photo by Nikhilesh De for CoinDesk
Published at Tue, 12 Mar 2019 19:13:25 +0000