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Scuti launches rewards-based gamers’ marketplace with mobile game Rock Out

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Scuti has launched its rewards-based gamers’ marketplace as well as its first network game Rock Out from developer 20 Below Games.

Players will be able to purchase products directly from within their games using the Scuti marketplace, and they can earn rewards for every purchase.

Rock Out is the first of a series of music rhythm games featuring rock, metal and punk music by real bands from 20 Below Games. Players can choose single-player gameplay with leaderboards or turn-based multiplayer in a challenge mode. The mobile game is free-to-play and available on iOS and Android.

“We’ve signed more than a dozen publishers and this is the first game that went live,” said Scuti CEO Nicholas Longano, in an interview with GamesBeat. “Players are able to peruse products and start earning rewards. They can start using those rewards to buy more products down the road, or they can use those rewards for a number of different things.”

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Tony Shiff, CEO of 20 Below Games, said in an interview with GamesBeat that he had considered doing rewards for gamers many years ago, but never got around to it. He said that Scuti offers an alternative monetization path for the studio that avoids constant spammy ads, which players hate.

“If we can get rid of intrusive ads, and make as much or more revenue utilizing Scuti, that’s a win-win for us and our players,” he said. “The barriers of the time when I tried earlier were too hard. I always thought it was a great idea and combine that with physical merch. And I just think it’s a terrific combination.”

NFT goods

Scuti lets gamers buy from inside a game.

Above: Scuti lets gamers buy from inside a game.

Image Credit: Scuti

Scuti is also working with Reality Gaming Group to deliver a nonfungible token (NFT) marketplace through Scuti’s gCommerce platform. This enables game developers and publishers to sell their own NFTs inside the stores of their games.

The new NFT feature is an addition to Scuti‘s platform, which helps gamers earn rewards while playing games and then use those rewards to buy real-world goods from a store embedded inside them.

Scuti’s founders believe that monetization is broken in games, as they say it annoys gamers. The popular forms of monetization in games today will slow players down by forcing them to grind. It puts paywalls in front of them, makes them watch video ads they don’t care about, or fools them into buying goods that don’t really have much value.

“Players can buy other real world goods, but they can also find that merchandise as well from particular fans,” he said. “It’s not just about the in-app purchases (of digital items) they can make in the game. But now they can actually sell real world goods, whether it’s the merchandise for that particular artist, or a or anybody else’s goods as well.”

Over the next couple of weeks, the company will expand the marketplace from a couple of vendors to more than 40.

Better than ads

Scuti puts a whole real-world e-commerce store in a game.

Above: Scuti puts a whole real-world e-commerce store in a game.

Image Credit: Scuti

Shiff agrees that the ads are annoying.

“I’ve been involved in free to play games since I started. And I think the proliferation of ads is just crazy,” Shiff said. “As developers, you just have to hammer the user with ads, but I don’t like it. I don’t like having to do it. So if there a mechanism that can pay me as a developer, then I would love to take those ads out. I think it’s a good thing for the player.”

Scuti says that all game developers need to do for this tech to work is add the button; the company will handle the rest. It runs the store, purchasing, supply chain management, fulfillment, data, analytics, upselling, merchandising, promotions, and more. Players can hit the Scuti button and spend what they earn in-game on real-world merchandise, like a pair of shoes. Scuti shows them the stuff that the people say they like. And the rewards can be substantial, Longano said.

“If you buy a pair of Nike sneakers, you can now take the studio rewards and use those rewards to actually wager against other players. And that’s pretty nice,” Longano said.

Scuti creates a button in a corner of the game lobby or main menu, and it is passive so that it doesn’t consume resources during gameplay. Players must opt-in to access the store and rewards, which it’s dubbed “Scutis.” The gamer can shop and stay inside the game’s lobby or main menu while doing so. The ads within the store are compliant with the Internet Advertising Bureau.

“If you buy a $100 pair of sneakers or even $50, the game is giving you 1% to 5% back,” Longano said. “So on every single transaction, you ‘re getting $1 to $5 more dollars back in your wallet.”

Scuti and Reality Gaming Group are enabling devs to sell NFTs in their stores.

Above: Scuti and Reality Gaming Group are enabling devs to sell NFTs in their stores.

Image Credit: Scuti/Reality Gaming Group

Scuti is a new retail channel with measurable attribution, activation and customer profile data. Brands can now access the “walled garden” of games, to reach and sell directly to players, Longano said. Players launch the Scuti store directly from their games, on any device they are playing. AI is used to make sure players see curated products that they may be interested in buying.

Scuti has jumped on the NFT bandwagon to allow game developers and publishers to tap directly into huge consumer demand for NFTs through its gCommerce SDK, giving players the capability to own, sell and trade digital assets. NFTs have exploded in other applications such as art, sports collectibles, and music. NBA Top Shot (a digital take on collectible basketball cards) is one example. Built by Dapper Labs, NBA Top Shot has surpassed $750 million in sales, just six months after going public. And an NFT digital collage by the artist Beeple sold at Christie’s for $69.3 million. Gaming has a couple of new unicorns, or startups valued at $1 billion, in Animoca Brands and Forte. NFTs are now selling at a rate of $828 million a month, well above the levels at the previous peak in May.

Rock Out lets players play the drums or guitar with multiple levels of difficulty. It features music by The Dead Daisies, OK Set, Feverwar, Jim Donovan & the Sun King Warriors, and more.

Shiff started 20 Below Games when he moved to Canada from California a few years ago. The focus is on music games, as he thinks the music industry is underserved.

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