Play-to-earn (P2E) gaming exploded onto the Web3 scene with promises of a paradigm shift. Players would be rewarded simply for participation, introducing an intoxicating blend of entertainment and income.
Enabled by blockchain and NFTs, early P2E titles like Axie Infinity and The Sandbox amassed millions of users, raised astronomical venture capital, and dominated headlines.
Yet, by mid-2025, the narrative has changed. As active wallets plummet and P2E projects shutter, the market is reckoning with harsh economic realities.
What went wrong—and what should we expect next from Web3 gaming?
The Play-to-Earn Boom: Why It Took Off
P2E was built on several intoxicating premises. Crypto-native players could earn tradable tokens by playing, completing tasks, or participating in game economies.
For many in lower-income regions, these rewards functioned as supplementary income.
Game developers, meanwhile, found ready investors entranced by user growth and token appreciation.
- Democratized rewards: P2E promised open access and financial inclusion for anyone with a smartphone.
- NFT and token hype: From avatar skins to virtual land, in-game assets became speculative marketplaces.
- Rapid onboarding: Social media and influencers fueled viral adoption, as newcomers raced to capitalise on “easy earnings.”
Cracks in the Economic Model
But underneath this growth, structural flaws were brewing:
1. Unsustainable Tokenomics
Most early P2E games relied on inflationary practices, issuing vast quantities of tokens to new players to fund rewards and maintain interest.
These newly minted tokens flooded the market, eroding their value as the playerbase stabilised or contracts expired.
- Ponzinomics: Economic incentives depended on the constant onboarding of new players. If the stream slowed, token value fell and exiting players triggered rapid market collapses.
- Volatility: In-game tokens often mirrored the wild swings of the broader cryptocurrency market, leaving players vulnerable to sudden losses.
2. Gameplay Weakness
As economic utility took precedence, game studios frequently neglected fun and user experience.
Many P2E games were little more than “click-to-earn” tasks wrapped in NFT layers. Once profit motivation faded, engagement collapsed.
- Player retention issues: Short-term profit seeking overtook community growth and genuine competition.
- Reputation problem: Critics began to conflate P2E with “play-to-speculate,” painting the sector as a casino rather than a creative force.
3. Regulatory Uncertainty
As the model’s economic side effects became clear, governments and regulators took note.
In several jurisdictions, P2E games were investigated for unlicensed gambling, securities violations, or failure to protect users.
- Legal risk: Regulatory uncertainties increased the compliance burden for startups and developers.
- Stalled launches: Many projects held back international expansion in fear of sanctions or legal blowback.
The Market Correction: Data and Impact
From Q1 2024 to Q2 2025, the P2E sector saw:
- Funding drop: More than 70% decline in new deal volume and VC investment.
- Wallet attrition: The number of daily active wallets in Web3 gaming dropped to under 4.8 million—a 10% monthly decline at its lowest point.
- Closure and pivots: Hundreds of projects pivoted to new models or shut down as rewards dried up and user churn accelerated.
Despite turbulence, Web3 gaming isn’t dying—it’s changing. A core lesson is that blockchain games, like all games, must deliver sustainable economics and fun first.
The New Economics: Play-to-Own and Sustainable Value
Developers are increasingly moving to play-to-own (P2O) and hybrid models.
Unlike P2E’s short-lived speculation, P2O emphasises true asset ownership, letting players collect, upgrade, and trade game items (skins, avatars, land) that have lasting rarity, utility, or aesthetic value.
Why Play-to-Own Matters
- Intrinsic value: Game assets have value based on gameplay, community, and uniqueness—not solely external speculation.
- Community engagement: Active governance, tournaments, and upgrades motivate players to stay involved.
- Robust secondary markets: Assets can be traded outside the game, supporting peer-to-peer value transfer and player-driven economies.
Towards Sustainable Web3 Gaming
Analysts and developers now recognise a handful of core tenets for economic success in blockchain gaming:
- Balanced tokenomics: Total supply, earning rates, and burn mechanisms need careful calibration to avoid inflation or unsustainable rewards.
- Strong gameplay: Fun and engagement must precede economic incentives. When players love the game—even without potential profit—they stick around.
- Real digital ownership: NFTs, interoperable assets, and blockchain transparency empower players and enrich communities.
- Regulatory clarity: Developers must design with compliance in mind, adapting reward structures and governance to meet evolving laws.
Case Studies: Changing Models, Real Results
- Illuvium and Pixels: Both have implemented play-to-own mechanics, emphasising unique assets and community competitions rather than direct token payouts.
- Decentraland and The Sandbox: Pivoted towards user-created content, persistent social worlds, and asset-based value, focusing less on raw P2E incentives.
- Axie Infinity: After the P2E bust, it rebuilt its economy to reward skill, rarity, and long-term community building.
What Comes Next?
The future of Web3 gaming lies in sustainable value. Asset scarcity, utility, and community building will be key drivers, not speculative earnings.
Applications of DAOs (Decentralised Autonomous Organisations) for governance, decentralised tournaments, and “meta-games” will give players more agency and boost retention.
- NFT gaming is forecasted to grow 25% annually through 2034, but only for projects prioritising solid economics and lasting entertainment.
- Hybrid monetisation—combining subscriptions, in-game purchases, and asset trading—will offer more stable revenue for studios and more trustworthy engagement for users.
Conclusion
The fall of play-to-earn revealed a simple truth: sustainable economics and quality gameplay must underpin any successful Web3 game.
While the era of speculative rewards may be fading, the rise of asset ownership, fun-first design, and community-driven economies is setting the stage for the next wave of decentralised gaming.
Edited by Annette George