KEY POINTS
  • SoftBank-backed virtual reality startup Improbable on Friday launched its plan for a network of metaverses capable of hosting thousands of users.
  • The company’s metaverse project, called MSquared, is more than a year in the making and would enable users to live, work and interact with each other virtually.
  • Improbable said that Google, Nvidia and Japanese cloud gaming firm Ubitus would serve as the technical partners for its metaverse network.
Improbable CEO and co-founder Herman Narula.

Improbable, a SoftBank-backed startup developing huge virtual worlds, on Friday launched its plans for a network of metaverses that it hopes will one day be capable of hosting thousands of users and compete with platforms from U.S. tech giants such as Meta and Microsoft.

The British company, which was founded in 2012, released a white paper detailing its vision for MSquared, a "network of interoperable Web3 metaverses," or 3D spaces in which people can live, work and interact with each other virtually. MSquared, which is a separate business entity from Improbable, raised $150 million from investors last year.