The Good Tech Companies - How Sustainable Are Web3 Game Economies? Sugarverse Raises $1 Million to Prove It
Episode Date: March 14, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/how-sustainable-are-web3-game-economies-sugarverse-raises-$1-million-to-prove-it. Sugarverse... secures $1 million to develop Web3 games with lasting economies, starting with Sugar Match on Tezos’ Etherlink in 2025. Check more stories related to tech-stories at: https://hackernoon.com/c/tech-stories. You can also check exclusive content about #sugarverse, #blockchain, #dlt, #cryptocurrency, #good-company, #sugarverse-news, #tezos, #startup, and more. This story was written by: @ishanpandey. Learn more about this writer by checking @ishanpandey's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Sugarverse secures $1 million to develop Web3 games with lasting economies, starting with Sugar Match on Tezos’ Etherlink in 2025.
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How sustainable are Web3 game economies? Sugarverse raises $1 million to prove it,
by A'Shawn Pondy. Sugarverse, a Web3 gaming studio based in Sofia, has completed a $1 million funding
round to support its work on blockchain-based games. The studio plans to use the money to
develop titles with economies designed to reward players
over time, starting with Sugar Match, a mobile game set to launch on the Tezos Layer 2 network
Etherlink this summer.
Data from Statista shows the global mobile gaming market reached $124 billion in 2024,
with projections to hit $150 billion by 2027, signaling a growing space where
Sugarverse aims to make its mark. The funding arrives as Web3 gaming grapples with questions
about longevity. A 2023 report from Coingecko found that 70% of Web3 games launched since 2018
have either shut down or seen their token values drop below initial levels, often duetto reward
systems that favor early
players and collapse under inflation.
Sugarverse, with a history of 10 Web2 games and a combined player base of 60 million,
claims its approach will differ by balancing rewards across all players, not just the first
wave.
Can Web3 gaming economies last?
Web3 games often rely on tokens or digital assets to incentivize play, but many struggle
to maintain value.
A study by Dapp Radar in 2024 noted that Play-Durn models, popularized in 2021, saw average token
declines of 85% within two years as new players entered and reward pools diluted.
Sugarverse says it has studied these failures and modeled its system after online poker,
where a fixed pool of value circulates among participants rather than inflating unchecked.
Nikolai Mitev, Sugarverse's co-founder and CEO, explained the studio's focus.
"...many games reward early adopters then leave latecomers with little.
Our data from Web2 shows retention drops when rewards feel unfair."
The studio's first Web3 title,
SugarMatch, will test this by distributing its native token, CNDY, in a way that aims
to keep the economy stable as the player base grows.
Detailson the exact mechanics remain limited, but the approach hinges on lessons from its
past mobile titles.
Why Mobile Matters in Web3?
Mobile gaming accounts for 49% of global gaming revenue,
according to Nuzu's 2024 report, yet Web3 adoption on phones lags behind.
Most blockchain games require wallets or technical setup, deterring casual players who dominate the
mobile market. Sugarverse plans to bridge this gap with Sugarmatch, offering a guest mode that
lets users play without immediate Web3 integration, adding blockchain features as an option later. Myteph said the goal is
accessibility. Players want fun first, not tutorials on crypto, the studio's Web2 experience,
where titles like its puzzle games averaged 6 million downloads each, guides this strategy.
By launching on Etherlink, which promises faster transactions and lower fees than many
layer 1 networks, Sugarverse hopes to reduce friction further, though it remains untested
whether casual players will embrace the Web3 elements over time.
Does blockchain improve gameplay?
Critics of Web3 gaming argue that blockchain often overshadows design, with mechanics built
around earning rather than enjoyment.
A 2024 survey by Game Developer found 62% of traditional developers believe web 3 prioritizes monetization over quality. Sugarverse counters this by emphasizing gameplay, using data from its
web 2 titles to refine sugar match before layering on blockchain features. FA Kucic, head of gaming at Trilitech,
which supports Tezos development, sees potential. Sugarverse brings mobile
expertise to a space that needs it. Etherlink's speed could help, but the
real test is if players stay for the game, not just the rewards. The studio's
1 million dollars will fund this balance, aiming toe-proof blockchain can enhance,
not define, a game.
SugarMatch's summer launch will offer the first look at whether this works.
What's next for Sugarverse? The funding supports more than just SugarMatch. Sugarverse plans a five-game series, each tied to the same C&D-wide token economy,
creating a shared system where assets move between titles.
This saga concept draws from web 2 trends like cross-game
ecosystems seen in franchises like Candy Crush, which has sustained players across multiple
releases since 2012. Might've hinted at broader ambitions, this is step 1.
Our community on ex-ESUSking for more, and we'll share updates soon. With Etherlink's backing
Entezo's focus on scalable applications, its network
processed 1.2 million transactions in February 2025 alone, for Tezos explorer, Sugarverse
has room to grow. Whether its model reshapes Web3 gaming depends on execution, but the
funding signals confidence in its direction. Don't forget to like and share the story.
Tip Vested Interest Disclosure. This author is an independent contributor publishing via our business blogging program.
Hacker Noon has reviewed the report for quality, but the claims herein belong to the author.
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