

Gaming has always been about identity. Your name on the leaderboard. Your rank in the competition. Your place in the ecosystem. The best players are remembered not by their stats alone but by the name attached to them.
Web3 gaming got that wrong from the start. Wallet addresses are functional, but they are not identities. A string of characters doesn't build a reputation. It doesn't inspire competition. It doesn't make a leaderboard feel like anything worth climbing.
Forest Protocol just changed that.
Every user on Forest Protocol can now claim a username. Once claimed, your name appears everywhere there is competition - trading competitions, leaderboards, Seed Vault auctions.
This is a small change that means a lot. A wallet address is anonymous. A name is a reputation. It is the difference between a number on a list and a presence in an ecosystem. As Forest Protocol grows, more games, more competitions, more players, the names that showed up early will be the ones people recognise. The ones with history in the protocol. The ones that were here before it was obvious.
Your username is the beginning of your on-chain gaming identity on Forest Protocol.
Claim it early.
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Forest Protocol is not just a launchpad anymore. It is becoming a full gaming ecosystem with games, economies, competitions, and communities all running on the same infrastructure.
In any gaming ecosystem, identity is foundational. Players build reputations. Communities form around names. Leaderboards mean something when there are real identities behind them.
Usernames are the first step toward a persistent on-chain gaming identity on Forest Protocol, one that follows you across events, competitions, and every activation on the platform.
Names claimed early carry weight. As the ecosystem grows — more games, more competitions, more players — your username becomes your identity across all of it.
There may be more benefits for those who show up first.
Claim your username at forest.inc under your profile.
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