Sometimes I think Web3 games like Pixels are less about revolutionizing gaming and more about quietly testing what parts of a familiar experience can be rebuilt underneath.
On the surface it’s just a farming and exploration game. You log in do simple tasks progress slowly. But underneath it’s sitting on infrastructure like the Ronin Network where ownership and assets are tracked differently than in traditional games. The interesting part is that most players probably don’t think about that while playing and maybe they shouldn’t have to.
Still, there’s a tension there. If the blockchain layer is invisible does it matter that it exists? And if it becomes too visible does it stop feeling like a game? That balance feels like the real experiment more than any token or feature.
It’s early enough that nothing feels settled. Just different systems quietly trying to share the same space.

PIXEL
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