VCs poured over $10b into crypto gaming over the last few years
but no one seems to be playing any crypto games
so where did all this money go and what happened with it? ↓↓↓
/1 some disclaimers:
$10b might be too much or too little
different sources state different numbers, $5-15b seems accurate
there are probably some notable ones missing
this only includes raises from VCs and not ICOs/nodes/other sales
data is from @DefiLlama and Crunch Base
/2 @Immutable ($857m)
Immutable is one of the leading gaming ecosystems in web3 with over 200 games building there like @illuviumio, @Pixelmon, @TheTreeverse & @GuildOfGuardian
they also recently launched their Passport which is supposed to make onboarding as easy as possible
/3 @Sorare ($740m)
raised $680m in a single round to build crypto fantasy games
own licenses to the NBA, MLB, and the biggest football leagues
according to themselves they have over 3m users
/4 Yuga ($450m)
while not all of this was dedicated to gaming, Otherside was supposed to become their flagship project
but as you can expect from Apes, all they shipped so far are some fiverr games
and this
/5 @SkyMavisHQ ($311m)
- created biggest web3 game of last cycle
- @Ronin_Network is one of the most used blockchains globally
- @pixels_online, the biggest web3 game of this cycle, is now building there
established themselves as the leading crypto gaming ecosystem
/6 @playmythical ($297m)
building web3 mobile games, most notably NFL Rivals which has seem solid success
they recently announced a partnership with Pudgy Penguins to build a party game based on the IP
/7 @limitbreak / @DigiDaigaku ($200m)
one of the biggest single rounds in crypto gaming
famously spend $9m on a Super Bowl ad for a free mint
launched a bunch of additional mints and created the ERC-721C token standard
raised $100m to build games, including crypto games
launched a free mint
abandoned crypto after they realized they can't grift a lot of money in a bear market
left right before the bull market was about to start, idiots
/11 @ParallelTCG ($85m)
- one of the highest quality web3 games
- trying to disrupt TCGs and building a strong sci-fi IP
- also building their own AI gaming infrastructure and game using AI agents in @AIWayfinder and @ParallelColony
also $prime is sitting at $600m mcap
/12 also, wtf is @FortePlatform and what did they raise $725m for?
there has been no public communication since one year...
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- ai waifu companion
- phase 1 of game launching very soon
- who doesn't like waifus? (no joke, the ai waifu market will be huge)
- @aiwaifugg is incubated by @virtuals_io with a $18m treasury
- 100% blast airdrop to LBP participants
- fair launch (no VCs/presale)
2/ some facts about PMF:
- people are single and lonely
- there has never been more people online (and they spend a record amount of time online too)
- people are not as opposed to ai partners as you might think
But they only focus on grabbing the attention of web3 gamers, how do they plan to adopt anyone with that?
Here's what I want to see more from projects:🧵👾
(and why it's important for your bags)
Many web3 project pride themselves with "building in public".
I'm a big fan of transparency and insights into development.
But one important aspect is not talked about often:
How do web3 games want to approach the web2 audience?
Projects love to talk about their vision, they'll have a 20 page whitepaper about their tokenomics, but their marketing strategies are often not public and questionable.
It's obvious that most web3 games HAVE to focus on web3 gamers in the beginning.
@Play_Renegades is building a web3 game ready for the masses, here's everything you need to know: 🧵👾
Codename:Renegades will be a tactical brawler
You can think of it as a combination of a MOBA and Autobattler
It's 1v1 PVP with each player having 3 characters and their "Nexus"
The ultimate goal is to destroy the enemies Nexus.
Each turn, players decide on actions for each character
The actions will play out simultaneously and not turn based, almost like a game of Rock, Paper, Scissors; where you have to predict what your opponent is going to do.