Web3 gaming company KGeN has begun the minting of their POG NFTs today, with core community members now able to acquire these NFTs for free.
These KGeN NFT collectibles are uniquely created by generative AI, and allow holders to own the data they create through playing a range of supported NFT games. Holders also get access to exclusive quests, tournaments and features, and will be able to build their POG Score – used for allocations of the soon-to-launch $POG token.
Core community members can mint their KGeN POG NFTs right now, with early access mints – available to members of partner communities – opening on February 3, and public mints opening on February 17.
Source: KGeN
What is KGeN?
KGeN is a Web3 gaming-focused infrastructure company that looks to help gamers verify their authenticity, own the data they generate through playing games, and reward those players with token airdrops and more.
Founded in 2023, KGeN is a fast-rising name in the NFT industry. Their technology helps developers to verify that players are human, and to remove bots from both everyday and tournament gameplay. The platform currently boasts over 4.4 million users across their network of supported games, and has partnered with the likes of Game7 DAO, PARAVOX, Spot Zero and more.
The release of their debut NFT helps open the path for their playerbase to receive tangible rewards, as well as acquire a bigger foothold in the KGeN ecosystem.
These POG NFTs have a trio of main benefits for holders, including:
Access to exclusive quests, tournaments and in-game features
The ability to claim and own the data you generate through play
The ability to grow your POG score, primarily used to determine an upcoming token airdrop allocation
The NFTs also give holders additional benefits across the KGeN ecosystem, such as a record of in-game achievements – helpful for tracking a player’s progress across multiple games, and for comparing their contributions with other players.
Holders will increase their POG score through playing KGeN-supported games, and for gathering achievements across their network of titles. KGeN have stated that on top of a forthcoming $KGEN token airdrop, holders will benefit from KGeN’s “large circle of ecosystem partners” that are looking to “reward deserving users through POG.”
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.