There's been a development that will likely make it more difficult for people in VRChat and similar virtual worlds to get new avatars. According to an article in Techcrunch, Netflix has purchased the program "Ready Player Me." For those who haven't heard of it, it's an avatar-creation platform for various virtual worlds and games.
Ready Player Me was founded in 2014 in Estonia. Over the past decade it has raised over 70 million US dollars from investors. It has a staff of twenty, who will all be joining Netflix. It's services, including Player Zero, will be going offline on Saturday January 31st.
The Techcrunch article stated Netflix "plans to use the startup’s development tools and infrastructure to build
avatars that will allow Netflix subscribers to carry their personas and
fandom across different games."
Scott Hayden in "The Road to VR" called the purchase "a blow to one specific group of people, namely VRChat users." Ryan Schultz felt while this would inconvenience users of the popular next-generation virtual world, at least it had a Marketplace for avatars for people to chose from. From his point of view, it would be the users of smaller virtual worlds that would truly be hurt as those platforms, "which wholly rely on Ready Player Me’s services ... are now going to
have to scramble to find and implement a replacement in very little
time."
Hat tip: Ryan Schultz
Sources: Techcrunch
Bixyl Shuftan


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