Crypto Games Keep Shutting Down. This $500K Fund Aims to Help Players Recover

Crypto Games Keep Shutting Down. This $500K Fund Aims to Help Players Recover

Crypto Games Keep Shutting Down. This $500K Fund Aims to Help Players Recover

Blockchain games are shutting down in droves so far this year, as hype and funding fade and crypto investors turn their attention elsewhere. But one long-running crypto game hopes to draw some of those players affected by shutdowns by offering free NFT assets for affected users.

Crypto trading card game Splinterlands is inviting the players of failed blockchain games to apply to its newly formed recovery fund, in which $500,000 worth of crypto tokens and in-game assets can be unlocked over the next seven years.

The project told Decrypt that it is currently in talks with other projects based on the Hive blockchain to allocate assets to the fund—and invites the broader industry to join in to save crypto gaming by giving burned users a bridge to new games.

Currently, only the players of the defunct crypto titles Pirate Nation, Tokyo Beast, and Walking Dead: Empires can access the Crypto Gaming Recovery Fund. Affected players must create a Splinterlands account, purchase a $10 item (which provides in-game credits of the same value), and submit their wallet address containing items from eligible games—which they get to keep.

Then they can start gradually unlocking assets over the next seven years from the $500,000 fund. The assets are released as long as the player remains active on Splinterlands, which is measured by a series of monthly challenges—such as playing five battles.

“I welcome any of our competitors who would want to be a part of this to come and join. Why would they want to? Because they want to see the space grow,” Dave McCoy, Chief Operating Officer at Splinterlands, told Decrypt. “We are just the first, but hopefully we have many other people join us.”

Crypto Game Crashouts: The Biggest Shutdowns So Far in 2025

An epidemic of crypto games shutting down has struck the industry this year, with countless notable projects closing shop. That includes Deadrop, Ember Sword, Nyan Heroes, Realms of Alurya, Symbiogenesis, Raini: The Lords of Light, and MetalCore—just to name a few. 

While all of these games have cited slightly different reasons behind their crashouts, one thing they all have in common is that they leave behind a player base with no game to play. And many of those players sunk cash into supporting the project, and are left with tokenized assets that no longer have utility.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *