The publisher of both games has just introduced its first tokens from the Worms franchise.
The controversy with NFTs does not seem to have an end near, except when we meet such disparate positions within the industry itself. Although large companies such as Ubisoft do not cease in their commitment to this new technology, even accusing players of not understanding its benefits, figures as important in the industry as phil spencerhas steered clear of these new policies, speaking of “ruling out making room for money-grubbing NFTs.”
Both studios disassociate themselves from Team 17’s NFTsWho has joined this new trend is Team 17, introducing a series of tokens based on the long-standing Worms franchise. This Ghost Town Games doesn’t seem to like it, who are under the Team 17 umbrella in the Overcooked edition. The study has shown its rejection of this technology forcefully in a statement on Twitter, publicly disassociating itself from the decisions of the publisher.
A movement to which It didn’t take long for the Spanish studio The Game Kitchen to joincreators of Blasphemous, a game that has also been published by Team 17. “In light of recent announcements, we consider it necessary to point out that The Game Kitchen does not support or endorse NFTsso we will never use them in our games,” the studio said.
From The Game Kitchen they assure that they will never include NFT in their games“Too we kindly ask you to be respectful with community managers, staff, and members of other studies who might have been involuntarily associated with these practices”, they demanded from the team, after apparently being rebuked by some users after the announcement of Team 17. Among the most critical of NFTs, is Josef Fares, the charismatic creator of the award-winning It Takes Two, who with In his usual tone, he stated that he would ‘rather get shot in the knee’ than include NFT in his future games.
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