Most Web3 games die from hyperinflation, but Pixels survives by mastering its economic engine: "sinks and faucets."
Instead of just printing reward tokens, it forces players to burn them for upgrades, VIP, and land taxes.
Interestingly, its land economy creates a brutal two-tier system dividing wealthy landowners and landless farmers—perfectly mimicking real-world capitalism.
But the ultimate question remains: Governance. They promise decentralization, but does the community truly hold power, or is it an illusion masked by core-team vetoes?
Pixels isn't just a retro farming game; it's a ruthless Wall Street simulator.