Cointime

Download App
iOS & Android

What Happened To Axie Infinity 5 Years After Its Launch?

Validated Individual Expert

Axie Infinity took the NFT gaming world by storm in 2021. Yet, through 2022, the game saw a steady decline in popularity. This left many actual and potential investors asking, what happened to Axie Infinity?

While the crypto-winter undoubtedly played a part in the decline of Axie Infinity, there is a larger, more profound message in their story that should serve as a guide for future NFT mobile gaming developers.

The story of Axie Infinity could be described as a tragedy with multiple reasons. We will all find out in this article.

To learn more about what Axie Infinity is, how the game is played, how its ecosystem works, and its impact on the users and gaming community, check out the article we’ve published in this link.

The Philippines’ Heavy Investment

When Axie first launched, it saw tremendous success in the Philippines, as it offered people a chance to play games to earn real sums of money. At one point, the Philippines accounted for over 40% of the total Axie Infinity player base.

The early adoption of Axie Infinity in the Philippines saw a swell of interest and active players. People who are living below the poverty line could earn an income by playing a game. The potential rewards for doing so far exceeded their wage potential. However, the passive nature of the game became its own worst enemy.

The Pandemic Contributed To Its Success

Axie Infinity hit the market in 2019, with the first battle system entering its alpha phase in December 2019. The launch of the game coincided with the global COVID-19 pandemic. As jobs were lost and people were confined to their homes, a chance to earn money by playing a mobile game ticked multiple boxes.

Playing a game helped to stave off boredom, while the crypto-NFT element offered a chance to supplement the lost income. However, the Axie gameplay mechanic is not overly engaging. Instead, the game embraces the hard-grind mechanic commonly associated with JRPG games.

The lure of potential profit pulled in a large player base. However, the slow and unrewarding gameplay saw many people fall away. Especially once the realization of the Axie Infinity payout structure became apparent.

Earnings Became An Issue Later On

Anybody who wonders what happened to Axie Infinity only needs to look at their play-to-earn mechanism. While there is a genuine chance to earn real money playing Axie Infinity, the rewards do not come close to matching the effort.

Rather than offering better rewards for those heavily invested players logging significant hours, it instead focuses on a reward system that grows based on the number of active players. As a result, the payout system more closely resembles a pyramid scheme than anything else.

The need to grind Axie Infinity took its toll on players. As the world started to open up once more, these people found themselves stuck. Playing long into the night for a reward that was not worth the effort. In addition, many players have cited physical and mental health problems. Caused by the hard work needed to get even a small reward in the Axie economy.

As more play-to-earn titles hit the market, offering more interactive and entertaining gameplay, many jumped ship away from the Axie universe.

The Costly Hacking Scandal

The cryptocurrency market struggled in 2022 due to the crypto winter that saw many blockchain-based currencies plummet. In addition, Axie Infinity also had to deal with a hacking scandal that saw over $600 million in SLP tokens stolen, further weakening the game’s infrastructure.

Not only were people finding the game boring with few enticing rewards, especially in the face of newer games, but gamers could suddenly no longer trust their confidential information to be safe.

Many players quit playing Axie because what little profit they made was wiped out. by the overreliance on new players investing in the game, despite existing player investment.

What The Future Holds For Axie Infinity

There is still hope and future for Axie Infinity, but everybody needs to be on board with it. The Axie currency SLP has plummeted in value, leaving those still invested in the game at something of a sticking point. The amount they have invested has decreased, yet to pull out now would forever leave the question of what it is they worked for.

The real problem with what happened to Axie Infinity is that the developers lost or changed their initial focus. The crypto winter and hacking scandal affected Vietnam-based developers Sky Mavis greatly. As a result, they created a new version of Axie Infinity based on the more traditional microtransaction model.

Axie Infinity: Origins is a free-to-play game that is crypto-free. Everything runs on microtransactions. This works to the advantage of the developers but sadly leaves original Axie Infinity players adrift.

Comments

All Comments

Recommended for you

  • Scammers use Google to promote fake Whales Market website to steal cryptocurrency

    According to a report from BleepingComputer, threat actors have discovered a method where scammers use Google's platform to promote phishing websites impersonating Whales Market in order to steal cryptocurrency. These fraudulent websites are placed as sponsored links (i.e. advertisements) at the top of Google search result pages, and despite the domain address displayed on the search result page appearing to be real, users will be redirected to the fake website upon clicking.

  • Cyvers: Hedgey suffered the same vulnerability on Arbitrum and lost about $42.8 million

    Cyvers Alerts on X platform stated that the system detected that the financial derivative agreement Hedgey Finance executed the same vulnerability on the ARB chain and gained approximately 42.8 million US dollars in profit.

  • Tether issues 1 billion USDT on Ethereum (authorized but not yet issued)

    Whale Alert has monitored Tether Treasury's addition of 1 billion USDT on Ethereum. Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino stated that this 1 billion USDT is a supplement to Ethereum inventory. This is an authorized but unissued transaction, which means that this issuance will be used for the next issuance request and cross-chain exchange inventory.

  • CertiK: Hedgey vulnerability was exploited and $1.9 million was stolen

    CertiK Alert posted on social media that it has detected that the on-chain token infrastructure protocol Hedgey has been exploited and stolen approximately 1.9 million US dollars.The attacker abused the createLockedCampaign function in flash loans to obtain approval for the use of tokens on the victim's contract. The USDC, NOBL, and MASA tokens in the victim's contract have been depleted.

  • Binance executives' bail application postponed again, still in custody

    The bail hearing for Binance executive Tigran Gambaryan has been postponed again by a Nigerian court, and he remains detained at the Kuje Correctional Center. The hearing is now scheduled for April 22, with the EFCC requesting time to respond to new arguments from the defense. Gambaryan's lawyer criticized the prosecution for failing to respond promptly. Binance has been accused of concealing the source of its income, while Gambaryan is accused of money laundering. In addition, he has also filed a lawsuit against the government for violating his human rights.

  • BTC breaks through $64,000

    The market shows BTC breaking through $64,000, now reporting at $64,012.44, with an intraday increase of 4.95%. The market fluctuates greatly, so please be prepared for risk control.

  • SEC accuses Justin Sun of frequent trips to the U.S. to sell tokens

    The US SEC has amended its lawsuit against Tron founder Sun Yuchen, stating that his frequent travel to multiple locations in the US allows the court to have corresponding jurisdiction. The SEC accuses Sun Yuchen and his company of selling unregistered securities through Tron and BitTorrent (BTT) tokens and engaging in manipulative money laundering transactions. The SEC claims that Sun Yuchen spent more than 380 days in the US from 2017 to 2019, with travel destinations including New York, Boston, and San Francisco. Sun Yuchen argues that the token sales were conducted entirely overseas, avoiding the US market, and therefore the SEC has no jurisdiction over him and the Tron Foundation, which is headquartered in Singapore. (Cointelegraph)

  • Cyvers Alerts: Multiple phishing transactions detected this morning

    Cyvers Alerts reported on X platform that multiple phishing transactions were discovered by the system this morning. The victims have approved the external owned accounts (EOA) of the phishers. We strongly recommend revoking the relevant approvals.

  • Shanghai Municipal Party Committee Secretary: Welcome Standard Chartered to establish more new institutions, new businesses and new platforms such as blockchain in Shanghai

    Chen Jinong, the Secretary of the Shanghai Municipal Party Committee, met with Weihao Si, the Chairman of the Board of Directors of Standard Chartered Bank, and Mark William D'Arcy, the Executive Director, and some members of the Board of Directors yesterday morning. Chen Jinong stated that he welcomes Standard Chartered Bank to leverage its own advantages, strengthen strategic connections, place more new institutions, businesses, and platforms such as wealth management and blockchain in Shanghai, focus on deepening pragmatic cooperation in technology finance, green finance, digital finance, and create more application scenarios, and provide comprehensive and professional service support for enterprises to go abroad.

  • An introduction to Composable Culture, what it is and why it matters

    The current landscape of emerging technologies like blockchain, web3, ai-related solutions and others is paving the way for what I see as the rise of composable culture (or modular culture as one of my peers said1). While I have been hinting the concept in my writings before, an explanation of why an there should be an umbrella term, what are it’s characteristics and advantages is needed.