As reported by Ars Technica, the NiFTy Arcade was a bit different from most of the NFTs on offer in GameStop’s marketplace, selling the ability to access certain games from one’s wallet, rather than (receipts for) JPEGs. However, these games weren’t made by the person minting them, and the actual creators had not given permission for them to be used in this way. The games, made in the (excellent, undeserving of this mess) Pico-8 engine, include Worm Nom Nom and Galactic Wars, both of which were and remain freely playable on the developers’ itch.io pages. The person who minted them as NFTs, Nathan Ello, was selling them for 0.019ETH (about $23/£19) and 0.052ETH (about $63/£52) respectively. The advantage of making this purchase over playing them for free, according to Ello via Ars, was “the convenience of playing the game directly from their wallet or their own profile page on the marketplace without having to navigate to mine.” This was apparently reason enough for hundreds purchases, earning Ello a reported 8.4ETH (about $14,878/£12,270) in primary sales and 4.67ETH (about $8,271/£6,822) in secondary sales. GameStop would also have recieved marketplace and commission fees on these transactions. Ello admitted to Ars that he minted the games without the developers’ permission. At least one of the games, Worm Nom Nom, was listed under a Creative Commons license that prohibits commercial usage. The games were removed from GameStop’s NFT marketplace, but Ello reportedly still has the cryptocurrency he received from selling them, and both Nifty and Ello still have active accounts on the marketplace. This isn’t the first time that GameStop have delisted an NFT from their marketplace, which launched just a couple of months ago. Recently they removed an image based on a 9/11 victim, as reported by PC Gamer. Neither is it the first time that a Web 3 project has used games without the developers’ permission. Back in June a site calling itself w3itch.io took source code and games hosted on the real, anti-NFT itch.io without consent from itch or the games’ creators. I could go on, but Web3 is going great already reports on everything happening in the space, all with helpful tags like “art theft,” “environment,” and “Yikes.”

GameStop s NFT marketplace sold games without developers  permission - 18