#pixel $PIXEL
I thought the crop would go to the landowner. I noticed this after I was watching the land settings and asked a naive question: why does it seem that some operations here belong to the owner, while other operations just pass through?
Same plot. Same movement. Different transaction. This worried me more than the rent percentage.
A crop, a machine, and a visiting player can sit on the same land, but the economy isn't obligated to treat them the same way. Some productive entities can send surplus to the landowner, while other actions on the same plot remain outside that division. Here's the weird point: Pixels don't process "event on my land" and "belongs to the economy" as one sentence.
Owning land doesn't mean that every job on it becomes your economy.
This is the point I like more than the usual reading about "land utility." Pixels don't just decide who owns the space. They decide what kind of work is allowed to turn into rent. This seems small until you imagine the ugly version: every useful action on someone else's land quietly turns into fees.
The point isn't that landowners earn less. The point is that Pixels don't allow every touch on the land to become rent.
This changes how I read a good plot. Movement alone isn't the whole story. And whether players still feel like workers in the blockchain gaming world.🚀
@Pixels #pixel
#night
#robo
I thought the crop would go to the landowner. I noticed this after I was watching the land settings and asked a naive question: why does it seem that some operations here belong to the owner, while other operations just pass through?
Same plot. Same movement. Different transaction. This worried me more than the rent percentage.
A crop, a machine, and a visiting player can sit on the same land, but the economy isn't obligated to treat them the same way. Some productive entities can send surplus to the landowner, while other actions on the same plot remain outside that division. Here's the weird point: Pixels don't process "event on my land" and "belongs to the economy" as one sentence.
Owning land doesn't mean that every job on it becomes your economy.
This is the point I like more than the usual reading about "land utility." Pixels don't just decide who owns the space. They decide what kind of work is allowed to turn into rent. This seems small until you imagine the ugly version: every useful action on someone else's land quietly turns into fees.
The point isn't that landowners earn less. The point is that Pixels don't allow every touch on the land to become rent.
This changes how I read a good plot. Movement alone isn't the whole story. And whether players still feel like workers in the blockchain gaming world.🚀
@Pixels #pixel
#night
#robo