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ingame.name is a unified identity profile tool for gamers, built around the idea of “One profile. All your gaming accounts.” Users can sign in with Discord, choose a unique username, and link accounts such as Steam, Riot Games, Epic Games, Xbox, and PlayStation to a public profile. They can then share their gaming identity through a single link like ingame.name/yourname.
Based on the information currently disclosed, its core modules include Discord login, username creation, gaming-platform account aggregation, a single Profile URL, and a Developer API. For regular players, the main value is reducing the fragmentation of profile information across multiple platforms. For developers, the API could be used to query a player’s identity across multiple platforms with a single request. However, the site does not show API documentation, rate limits, authentication methods, or SDKs, so developer support still appears to be at an early and lightly documented stage.
The website clearly states “Free to use. No credit card required.”, meaning it is currently free to use and does not require a credit card. However, it does not disclose whether there will be future paid plans, premium features, or enterprise packages. Common enterprise SaaS capabilities such as team collaboration, role-based permissions, and organization management are not mentioned. In terms of data security and compliance, there are also no details on privacy, authentication, encryption, or compliance standards, so it should not be treated as mature enterprise-grade identity infrastructure.
The main advantage is the very short onboarding path: sign in with Discord, choose a username, link platform accounts, and generate a shareable profile. Its positioning is clear and well suited to gaming social scenarios. Support for multiple major gaming platforms and the availability of an API also give it some platform potential. The downside is that the product is still in early access, with unclear stability, data coverage, account verification mechanisms, and long-term business model. Information that enterprise users care about—such as permissions, security compliance, and service support—is largely missing.
It is better suited to gamers, streamers, esports team members, community operators, and lightweight developers who need to build gaming-identity lookup capabilities. The site does not provide information about access from China, so this would need to be tested in practice. At the same time, the experience of accessing related platforms such as Discord and Steam from mainland China may be affected by local network conditions. If you only need a personal link-in-bio page, Linktree, Carrd, or Bio.link may be alternatives. If you only want to display gaming profiles, Steam, Discord, or the built-in profile pages of each gaming platform may also be sufficient.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on ingame.name official site.
ingame.name is an Unknown Gaming provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach ingame.name directly.