gaming
This Week in Crypto Games: Sonic SVM TikTok Airdrop on Solana, MLG Meme Coin Soars
Published
3 months agoon
By
admin

The crypto and NFT gaming space is busier than ever lately, what with prominent games starting to release, token airdrops piling up, and a seemingly constant array of other things happening at all times. It’s a lot to take in!
Luckily, Decrypt’s GG is all over it. And if you need a quick way to get caught up on the latest moves around crypto video games, we’re happy to present This Week in Crypto Games.
Our weekend roundup serves up the biggest news from the past week, along with a few other tidbits you might have missed. We also showcase a few of our original stories from the week.
Biggest news
TikTok airdrop: Sonic SVM, a layer-2 gaming chain built on top of Solana, launched its SONIC token on Tuesday. The token peaked at a $443 million market cap but has since fallen to $277 million. With this, players of the project’s TikTok tap-to-earn game Sonic X were able to claim their token allocations—with the claim period ending on January 30.
The game followed the simple tapping premise that most games within the genre follow, but innovated by launching the game via TikTok rather than Telegram. This helped the project reach more than 2 million players, which Sonic SVM said has proven it to be a success. Now, Sonic SVM wishes to onboard third-party projects to follow in its footsteps.
Call of Duty meme coin: 360noscope420blazeit (MLG) skyrocketed 5,200% over just six days thanks to Call of Duty-themed nostalgia. The Solana meme coin hearkens back to the perceived golden era of Call of Duty—before “omnimovement” and overly complex killstreaks, or the flood of microtransactions and goofy skins. It’s not just vibes either: They’ve launched custom online servers for classic Call of Duty games to draw in a community of crypto gamers.
This approach quickly attracted a cult-like following, but when members of iconic esports team FaZe Clan started shilling the token, it went parabolic. Richard “FaZe Banks” Bengtson believed in the token so much that he even got a tattoo of the original MLG logo—that is, Major League Gaming, an organization that was at the heart of the Call of Duty esports scene.
The MLG token isn’t an official offering of that Activision-owned tournament organizer, of course, but that hasn’t stopped it from posting monster gains. MLG has peaked at a price of nearly $0.178 as of this writing, putting it at peak market cap of about $177 million on Saturday. It’s down almost 30% since then.
The Machines Arena on Steam and PS5: Ethereum hero shooter The Machines Arena—which runs on gaming network Ronin—is coming to new platforms, and will release on leading PC marketplace Steam as well as the PlayStation 5 console. However, due to both platforms having restrictive crypto policies, those versions of the game will have zero or potentially limited crypto features.
On Steam, there will be absolutely no crypto features. However, for the PlayStation 5 release, Directive Games Design Manager David Gracia told Decrypt the company is still in discussions with Sony about how crypto elements could be implemented. This is something to keep an eye on, as we’ve yet to see a game successfully implement live crypto features on PlayStation (Off the Grid, in early access, has a testnest blockchain on the back end but no current player-facing on-chain features).
ICYMI
- Telegram game Trump’s Empire claimed to have surpassed 4 million total players.
- A Pudgy Penguins game is in development by Playember, set to launch on Abstract.
- Transak went live on Ethereum gaming network Ronin with its fiat-to-crypto infrastructure.
- An AI agent called Jaihoz—based on Axie Infinity co-founder Jeff “Jihoz” Zirlin—launched on Ronin thanks to the Virtuals Protocol.
- PIXEL, the token tied to social farming game Pixels, is set to receive staking soon.
Staking is coming for $PIXEL – I think we’re coming up with a pretty novel system – more details soon
— Luke Barwikowski
(@whatslukedoing) January 8, 2025
GG spotlight
Here are a few of our original stories from this past week that we think are well worth a weekend read:
Edited by Andrew Hayward
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Get the latest web3 gaming news, hear directly from gaming studios and influencers covering the space, and receive power-ups from our partners.
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gaming
This Week in Crypto Games: Gaming Tokens Crash Out, Eve Frontier Opens Up
Published
3 hours agoon
April 13, 2025By
admin

The crypto and NFT gaming space is busier than ever lately, what with prominent games starting to release, token airdrops piling up, and a seemingly constant array of other things happening at all times. It’s a lot to take in!
Luckily, Decrypt’s GG is all over it. And if you need a quick way to get caught up on the latest moves around crypto video games, we’re happy to present This Week in Crypto Games.
Our weekend roundup serves up the biggest news from the past week, along with a few other tidbits you might have missed. We also showcase a few of our original stories from the week.
Biggest news
Gaming tokens bomb out: Crypto assets large and small have made wild swings in recent weeks amid President Trump’s ever-shifting trade war, but gaming tokens have been hit harder than most. And if you take a look at CoinGecko’s list of the top 100 coins by market cap, gaming tokens are nowhere to be found.
Immutable (IMX) was the last holdout, but it fell from the rankings last Monday, only briefly returning around midweek. About a year ago, there were six gaming tokens on the list, including The Sandbox (SAND) and Gala Games (GALA), but no more. All of the long-running gaming majors are down substantially, while last year’s biggest new gaming tokens have all cratered since.
We took a comprehensive look at the issues plaguing the crypto gaming space of late and how broader crypto trends are impacting the value of gaming tokens, with industry experts sharing their thoughts about the current state of play.
Eve Frontier trial: Eve Frontier, an Ethereum-based MMO space survival game, kicked off a 10-day free trial period on April 11, allowing players to explore its universe without the perks of paid Founders Access passes. The trial—which ends on April 21—coincides with the game’s third phase, typically a period for implementing new features.
CCP Games, which raised $40 million in 2023 to expand its Eve Online universe via blockchain, launched closed alpha access for Eve Frontier in December with Founders Access passes priced between $30-$90. The company recently hired a former Central Bank of Iceland economist to develop its player-driven financial system.
Built on Redstone, an Ethereum layer-2 network, Eve Frontier will support multiple tokens, including an eventual EVE utility token. The game follows Eve Online, a hardcore MMORPG released in 2003 that continues to thrive with dedicated player corporations and extensive community lore.
Immutable is merging networks: Ethereum gaming platform Immutable announced plans to merge its original Immutable X network into its newer Immutable zkEVM layer-2 blockchain in late 2025. This consolidation aims to unify its gaming ecosystem following substantial growth for the zkEVM network, which has processed nearly 150 million transactions since early 2024.
For users, the transition will be largely automatic, with assets being transferred to existing wallets, though there will be an opt-out option available. However, game developers face more significant adjustments, including deprecated APIs requiring reimplementation of certain mechanics and changes to collection addresses.
Guild of Guardians has already completed this migration, pioneering the upgrade for other notable games on the platform like Gods Unchained and Illuvium.
ICYMI
- Ethereum game Aavegotchi is jumping from Polygon to Base following a community vote, and will shutter its layer-3 Geist network.
- A Fortnite-themed Solana meme coin briefly pumped in value after Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney labeled it a “scam” on X.
The Realms Are Shifting…
Realms of Alurya is officially moving to @Ronin_Network
A powerful step into the next era of Web3 gaming.
A world of dungeons, loot, and legacy awaits.— Realms Of Alurya (@RealmsOfAlurya) April 8, 2025
- Gaming network Xterio Chain will be sunsetted, with all assets being migrated over to BNB Chain.
- Horizon Blockchain Games has rebranded as Sequence, the name of its gaming infrastructure suite. Blockworks reports that its long-running NFT card game Skyweaver will continue on under the new brand.
- Roblox-like crypto game Nifty Island has launched its Playground Options Expansion to give builders more options.
- The makers of mobile game Heroes of Mavia released a roadmap for the rest of the year, including game updates, a marketplace launch, and plans for additional games.
Mavia’s 2025 Roadmap is here.
From Nexira migration to Alliance Wars—this year sets the foundation for the future of onchain gaming.
Let’s break it down.
pic.twitter.com/aOAopGUxAY
— Heroes of Mavia (@MaviaGame) April 8, 2025
GG spotlight
Here are a few of our original stories from this past week that we think are well worth a weekend read:
Edited by Andrew Hayward
GG Newsletter
Get the latest web3 gaming news, hear directly from gaming studios and influencers covering the space, and receive power-ups from our partners.
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gaming
Gaming Tokens Are Disappearing From Crypto’s Top 100—What Happened?
Published
5 days agoon
April 8, 2025By
admin

There are now zero gaming tokens in the top 100 cryptocurrencies by market capitalization, according to data from CoinGecko, after Immutable (IMX) fell from the rankings on Monday. CoinMarketCap’s ranking still has a few gaming tokens near the bottom of the list, but the takeaway is much the same: Top gaming coins are down bad.
Crypto games have hit prominent peaks over the last year in terms of both mainstream reach and praise from gamers, but the tokens are fading fast and new ones are struggling to catch on.
Just a year ago, there were six gaming tokens in the top 100, according to the Wayback Machine. At the time, CoinGecko’s gaming tokens category had a total market capitalization of $29.3 billion. It’s down 68% to $9.24 billion today, even with more tokens launching since.
Ethereum gaming platform Immutable had been the last holdout, and its token has fallen hard over the last year. IMX was the 31st most valuable cryptocurrency in the world in December 2023, per CoinGecko, after investment firm VanEck gave Immutable a big vote of confidence, projecting that IMX would land in the top 25 tokens in 2024. Even one year ago today, it was ranked #34.
Since then, IMX is down 87% over the last year amid a broader crypto gaming cooldown and SEC investigation that the firm recent said was closed. Immutable’s token has plunged 29% in the last week alone, compared to Bitcoin at a nearly 10% dip, and was the biggest weekly loser in CoinGecko’s top 100 on Monday—until it slid out of view to its current rank of #103.
Other major gaming tokens that were once in the top 100 have also fallen hard in the last year—such as Gala Games (GALA), which is down 80% (19% this week alone), and The Sandbox (SAND), which has fallen 64% in that span (and 16% in seven days).
Those longtime coins have fallen sharply from respective peaks set back in 2021. But even big, recently launched gaming tokens are struggling. Last year’s Pixels (PIXEL) token has plunged 98% from its peak, while Notcoin (NOT) is down 94% and Hamster Kombat (HMSTR) has fallen 68%.
Last week, the GUN token tied to Gunzilla Games’ popular Off the Grid game and its Avalanche L1-based GUNZ network launched, marking the biggest gaming token rollout in months. But it’s already down 62% from the peak price, even before Gunzilla gets GUN integrated into the game.
Better games are here
Off the Grid was Decrypt’s pick for 2024 GG Game of the Year, and after making a big splash last fall, it has helped fuel perceptions that the current crop of crypto games is better than it’s ever been. It’s a big step up from the play-to-earn surge of 2021, driven by the simplistic monster-battling game Axie Infinity.
“In 2021, it was safe to say that it was purely a narrative with zero products, ignoring the top-performing ones like Axie,” pseudonymous Treeverse game founder Loopify told Decrypt. “Now, a few years later, there is actually a wide range of products, but [they] still need time and they haven’t broken into the mainstream.”
Back then, Axie Infinity led the way before its in-game economy, token, and player base took a major hit in early 2022. Now, there’s now a range of quality games, plus games that have drawn millions of players—though popularity and acclaim aren’t always overlapping attributes.
Hamster Kombat drew in 300 million players for the tap-to-earn Telegram game last summer, albeit with repetitive, rudimentary gameplay. Once the token launched in September, players griped about the price and then largely disappeared, while developers were slow to launch a follow-up season.
Off the Grid had one of the most successful public launches for a crypto game in October, becoming the top free title on the Epic Games Store—beating out Fortnite in the process. Farming game Pixels and trading card game Parallel have both drawn praise from players and cultivated growing audiences, while survival experience Crypto: The Game has been a viral, albeit niche hit.
“I actually think the state of gaming is in a solid position,” Jaxie, the pseudonymous community manager for crypto gaming clan GIA, told Decrypt. “We have great games starting to launch, which could onboard millions into the ecosystem.”
But there are misfires
Making a good game takes time—just ask Rockstar Games, which has been developing Grand Theft Auto 6 for seven years with a massive team and funding. This explains why, despite hype for crypto gaming starting years ago, we’re only starting to see the fruits of that labor now.
Equally, that has led to the downfall of crypto games that have attempted to do too much, too soon. The Illuvium franchise is a prime example. Illuvium’s token debuted in 2021 and quickly peaked at $1,749, per CoinGecko. This caused a whirlwind of hype around the project, causing expectations to be sky-high when the team released three interconnected games in July 2024.
However, Illuvium did not live up to expectations, with co-founder Kieran Warwick admitting this February that there were valid “concerns” about its gameplay amid a planned overhaul. The ILV token is down 99.4% from its all-time high to a current price of just $10.60.
“Crypto games 99% of the time just aren’t good,” Munnopoly, a pseudonymous team member behind gaming meme coin MLG, told Decrypt. “They seem to be crypto [tokens] first and games second. I think they have always been struggling to bridge the gap with Web2 gamers.”
One title that appeared poised to bridge that gap was Deadrop. With former Call of Duty and Halo developers and popular streamer Dr. Disrespect involved, mainstream gamers were paying attention as it took shape. However, the studio shut down in January as it ran out of runway following a messy breakup from Dr. Disrespect, amid allegations of inappropriate conversations with a minor.
“I think Deadrop’s cancellation was a major setback for the space,” said content creator MayorReynolds. “It was one of the few games in the space that had the long-term potential to stand on its own as a video game and implement Web3 features in a way that gamers and players could grasp.”
However, gaming projects running out of cash isn’t a rarity. Recently, blockchain gaming ecosystem Treasure announced a major restructuring and downscaling due to financial woes, and Blockworks reported last week that Neon Machine—the creator of shooter Shrapnel—is running out of money.
The makers of Ethereum game The Mystery Society suspended development on the social deduction game in February, with co-creator Chris Heatherly calling out what he saw as destructive behavior from all corners of the blockchain gaming industry.
“Greed and stupidity from just about all players is killing the space before it can prove itself,” Heatherly told Decrypt then. “We need to be focused on building healthy on-chain businesses first, and end this [token generation event]-to-nowhere ponzinomic fallacy. Every Web3 gaming founder I know is frustrated, burned out, and just doing what they are doing to try to survive—but with true conviction evaporating by the day.”
Rethinking the narrative
Part of the issue around gaming tokens lately, according to Loopify, is that investors are gravitating towards crypto assets that are more likely to flip a profit. Since the last major gaming bull run, he noted, the industry has seen waves of investment in meme coins, then social finance, and more recently artificial intelligence.
With each wave of hype that flows to another asset category, less attention is paid to gaming tokens. Such tokens remain volatile in the market, but with much sharper downswings of late.
“The narrative disappeared a while ago, [and] so did a lot of willing buyers since crypto plays [into] trends,” Loopify told Decrypt. “Even if the games were better and at a cheap price for investment in the form of NFTs, tokens, and equity—the market wouldn’t be efficient enough to price them on that straight away. It would take some time for it to reflect.”
Jaxie, however, questions if crypto games even really need a token at all. He believes that gamers only really care about owning their skins via the blockchain, not a game-specific token. Such tokens fuel speculation around projects, but the negative perception around a crashed token can rattle these communities and create impossible expectations.
“Most games shouldn’t run on their own token in the first place,” he said. “Launching a token seems to be more of a marketing tool or crowd pleaser to the current base—don’t get me wrong, I farm those airdrops too—than an actual game utility token.”
The recent wave of tap-to-earn games has seen countless tokens launched to feed each game’s necessary incentive to keep tapping. Ultimately, however, there is very little utility for the tokens post-launch, leading to them plummeting in value. It’s happened over and over again, from Hamster Kombat to Catizen and Zoo, and then some.
Furthermore, the play-to-airdrop trend that swept the industry last year again put tokens in the pockets of players with little incentive to hold onto them. Like the earlier play-to-earn craze that eventually crashed and burned, the initial buzz fueled a surge in interest and sentiment—but the downfall can be painful for projects and players alike.
“Most Web3 gamers are just crypto degens here to make money,” Jaxie said. “Most [crypto] games have a 90-day lifespan before [the] player base drops off significantly—so why build for an economy you know will have a massive population dropoff in three months?”
Edited by Andrew Hayward
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This Week in Crypto Games: ‘Off the Grid’ Token Live, Logan Paul ‘CryptoZoo’ Lawsuit Continues
Published
1 week agoon
April 6, 2025By
admin

The crypto and NFT gaming space is busier than ever lately, what with prominent games starting to release, token airdrops piling up, and a seemingly constant array of other things happening at all times. It’s a lot to take in!
Luckily, Decrypt’s GG is all over it. And if you need a quick way to get caught up on the latest moves around crypto video games, we’re happy to present This Week in Crypto Games.
Our weekend roundup serves up the biggest news from the past week, along with a few other tidbits you might have missed. We also showcase a few of our original stories from the week.
Biggest news
Off the Grid token launch: Gunzilla Games, the creator of crypto battle royale game Off the Grid, launched its Avalanche L1-based GUNZ gaming network on Monday, rolling out its GUN token in the process. In the hours following the token’s launch, it sank 24% and has continued to tumble throughout the week.
The token launch received some criticism from market participants due to an apparent last-minute change to the tokenomics that removed an unlock for seed and strategic investors. One source familiar with the matter told Decrypt that this decision was made a couple of weeks ago and was approved by investors. On top of this, the previously scheduled unlock would have only released up to 5% of the investors’ total allocation—a likely insignificant amount to most involved.
Despite the blockchain hitting mainnet, Off the Grid itself remains on testnet. This means that in-game items can only be traded for testnet GUN tokens, which hold no real-world value. When the game transitions from testnet to mainnet, players will keep their skins and items but their GUN balances will be wiped. As a result, skin collectors have told Decrypt that prices for items have spiked as players look to shift their testnet tokens and keep a hold of their items.
The game’s transition to mainnet is expected to come over the “next few weeks.”
Seen a lot of people piling in with FUD this week, so I wanted to address a few things:
1) TGE Unlock Changes
Securing T1 exchanges like Binance is in the best interest of the project. If investors are “rekt” after opting-in to remove either a 2% or 5% unlock, they are doing… https://t.co/4nw0RYR2CS
— Piers Kicks (@pierskicks) April 3, 2025
Logan Paul CryptoZoo lawsuit continues: The lawsuit brought against YouTube detective Coffeezilla by influencer Logan Paul is moving forward, after a U.S. judge denied the sleuth’s request to dismiss Paul’s claims with prejudice.
This comes after Coffeezilla (whose real name is Stephen Findeisen) made a series of videos and social media posts calling out Paul’s CryptoZoo NFT game, which never launched despite people investing a substantial amount of crypto into it.
Coffeezilla’s lawyers filed in February to dismiss the case, claiming that the alleged libelous statements were not capable of defaming Paul. But a Texas magistrate judge disagreed, pointing to Findeisen’s use of the word “scam” as meeting the defamatory definition, highlighting his role as a crypto investigator as another key factor.
Vibe coding competition: Minecraft-esque crypto voxelverse and world-building game Hytopia is asking creators to build web-based mini-games with its development kit—and help from AI. Hytopia is offering $5,000 in total prizes across the best three vibe coders in a new AI “vibe coding” competition. Judges will take a week to evaluate the created games after the 14-day competition comes to a close.
Vibe coding is a rising term for coding through conversations with AI assistants, allowing users of all skill levels to simply “vibe” on thoughts and ideas and not stress about lines of intricate code, leaving the AI to handle the specifics.
HYTOPIA GAME JAM 2: Where Vibe Coding Meets The Future of Games
Calling ALL creators, coders, and chaos-makers!
HYTOPIA Game Jam 2 is here to push boundaries. Build web-based mini-games using our SDK + AI-powered ‘vibe coding’ to turn wild ideas into playable reality.
No… pic.twitter.com/JNSs0BqpmG
— HYTOPIA (@HYTOPIAgg) March 31, 2025
ICYMI
- The makers of crypto first-person shooter Shrapnel partnered with the Chinese government to become the first licensed Web3 game built on the nation’s official RWA Trusted Copyright Chain.
- …but Blockworks reports that Shrapnel maker Neon Machine is running out of cash, and that the China play was made to keep the studio going.
- Crypto game Infected is moving from Base to Solana over “demand” issues, which Base builders pushed back on.
- Solana idle role-playing game Defi Dungeons launched on Wednesday.
GOBLIN DMV IS OPEN FOR BIDNESS!https://t.co/5X9UwUXjWc
You’ve raw dogged flights, but can you handle the Goblin DMV?
Our state of the art DMV Simulator is the only place in town to get a goblin license. You may want to sit down for this…
*no wallet connect needed. pic.twitter.com/kwGQ1KNBdo
— goblintown (@goblintown) April 1, 2025
GG spotlight
Here are a few of our original stories from this past week that we think are well worth a weekend read:
Edited by Andrew Hayward
GG Newsletter
Get the latest web3 gaming news, hear directly from gaming studios and influencers covering the space, and receive power-ups from our partners.
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