💎 Why It Matters
=================
Play-and-earn games are onboarding millions (and soon billions) of people into web3.
🔍 Problem
==========
Gamers spend billions of hours and dollars on games.\
Without ownership, alignment or governance rights.
💡 Solution
============
Play-and-earn games give players:
- Transferable assets
- Strong property rights
- The ability to participate in governance
- The ability to exit and remix games via forks
- The ability to build and monetize assets and experiences
Play-and-earn games give developers:
- New business models
- Deep alignment with players
- New ways to acquire and retain players
- Faster development times with user-generated content
🏁 Players
==========
Play-and-Earn Games
🔮 Predictions
==============
- Play-and-earn games will build increasingly complex economies. Axie Infinity has $AXS, $SLP, $RON, Axies, land and other items. Players can breed, battle, trade, lease, flip and govern virtual worlds.
- Learn-to-earn models will become more common. Coinbase pays users to learn about DeFi concepts and cryptocurrencies.
- Engage-to-earn models will become more common. Brave Browser gives BAT tokens to users that opt into ads.
- The play-and-earn movement will birth new game studios. Incumbents like Ubisoft face backlash from trad gamers. The same applies to Discord. New companies will attract aligned users and work from first-principles.
- There will be crossover between in-game and non-game economies. $SLP is used to pay for everyday products and services. Like home internet.
☁️ Opportunities
================
- Explore new monetization models as a gamer or developer.
- Create content and onboard players to play-and-earn games.
- Build a game for an existing community. Realms (for Adventurers) built on Loot (for Adventurers) by offering mint passes to Loot owners.
- Port traditional games to play-and-earn models. PoolTogether and MimirQuiz put a spin on lotteries and traditional quizzes, respectively.
🏔️ Risks
=========
- Complexity - Play-and-earn economies are becoming more complex. Game designers may not grasp the second-order effects of design decisions. Your assets may suffer.
- Misinformation - Do your own research. Play games and engage with communities before investing.
🔑 Key Lessons
==============
- Earning from games is not new. Traditional games have unofficial secondary markets. HQ Trivia paid players directly. The difference is that play-and-earn games have strong, irrevocable property rights, open-source code and governance tokens.
- Play-and-earn is a gateway drug to DeFi. In-game assets can be traded, leveraged, staked and sold. Players will come to play. Then learn what crypto has to offer.
- Play-and-earn will hush NFT skeptics. In-game NFTs have utility. You can't right-click-and-save a community. Or utility.
😠 Haters
=========
"Money takes the fun out of games."
We play the lottery (with negative expected returns), poker and trade physical sports cards. Games are a form of escapism. Alignment improves these experiences. See PoolTogether. A no-loss lottery.
"Where's the moat if games are open-sourced and forkable?"
We're in the age of user-owned networks. See Wolf Game and Sheep Game. Forks let you choose the reality that you want to live in. Legitimacy must be earned and maintained.
"I already own physical collectible cards."
Now you have digital scarcity too. Without a trusted third party. As we said in the DAOs report, Can't be evil is better than don't be evil.
🔗 Links
========
🙏 Thanks
=========
Thanks Vajresh Balaji, Erwan Gallo, Prabhjot Lamba, Alex Edmonds, Ashwin, Sean Hua and Michael Munger. We had a great time jamming on this report.
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