- The
Brooklyn Nets have launched their own virtual world called the "Netaverse." - In a video posted to Twitter, the team said it's the first pro sports team to introduce the technology.
- More than 100 cameras around the court will turn images into virtual renderings of the game.
The Brooklyn Nets have created their own virtual world dubbed the "Netaverse."
The name is a riff on the futuristic concept of the metaverse, a virtual world where people interact as avatars of themselves.
For the Nets' take on it, more than 100 cameras around the court will feed into a video system that "quickly generates incredible lifelike 3D renderings in a matter of seconds," YES Network said in a video on Twitter.
The worldwide premiere of the new technology on January 15 when the Nets faced the New Orleans Pelicans on Brooklyn's home court, the Barclays Center.
"The Netaverse will bring viewers to places on the court never seen before," the YES Network's video said. In the clip, Nets players can be seen running up and down the court, just like in a regular basketball game, but in this view, they're digital.
The Nets are the first pro sports team to have the technology, YES Network said. A representative from the team did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment. The Nets official Twitter account, however, retweeted YES Network's original post on the new technology.
The
Metaverse video games like Axie Infinity, Sandbox and Decentraland have grown in popularity, and each of their native tokens have soared in value compared to other cryptocurrencies amid growing hype around the concept.