A lot of folks dive into blockchain gaming, and the first question they usually toss out is: how does this project actually make money?

But recently, while re-evaluating @Pixels, I think the more crucial question is: what keeps people coming back?

In today's market, the priciest asset isn't a wallet balance; it's attention. Sure, tokens can be bought, traffic can be driven, and hype can be generated, but the number of users willing to return consistently, engage deeply, and invest their emotions is dwindling. Most projects start off with a bang, but within weeks, the crowd disperses—not due to lack of incentives, but because they never truly captured users' daily time.

What's intriguing about Pixels is that it doesn't rely on one-time gimmicks to pull people in. Instead, it's cleverly weaving itself into your daily routine. You come back today to gather some resources, tomorrow to tidy up a plot, and the day after for a round of tasks. The individual experience might not be explosive, but it slowly evolves into a product that you just casually check in on. That action is minimal, but once it becomes a habit, its value skyrockets.