Sam Altman’s blockchain project, World Network, is working with gaming hardware company Razer on a set of features designed to remove bots in video games.
“Razer ID verified by World ID” is a single sign-on mechanism that validates real human gamers from bots. According to a statement shared by Razer and World, it is built on Razer’s existing login service, Razer ID, and will help ensure there is “the real person behind every Razer ID account.”
The collaboration between the two companies is due to the infiltrating artificial intelligence (AI) tools into every corner of your online life. This has been troubled by non-human AI “bots” long before the rise of Altman’s ChatGpt.
A study by Echelon Insights, which the world shared with Coindesk, says about 59% of gamers regularly encountered chelon-party bots in their games. In addition to causing general annoying players, bot accounts often have tactical advantages over real players, which can ruin the competitiveness of some multiplayer games.
“Game developers have the tools to create dynamic spaces where real players (not bots) dominate the digital landscape,” the world said in a statement.
The integration of Razer with World Network is based on the world’s existing blockchain-based identity solutions that use IRIS scans to distinguish real people online using IRIS scans.
This new feature will be integrated into Tokyo Beast first. This is a future Tokyo-based version of the blockchain-based game. It’s a proper pairing. The main premise of the game is people who coexist with autonomous Android.
When a user logs in to Tokyo Beast, they are asked to sign in using a globally recognized Razer ID, allowing them to play online only with real human players.
“As AI continues to rebuild the gaming world, we want to enhance gamers and game developers with the tools they need to navigate this transformation safely and confidently. “Working with the world ensures that real players are at the heart of every experience, designed for the game’s fair, immersive, and human.”
Read more: Sam Altman’s World Network announces new chat features to connect real people

