Play-To-Earn (P2E) is a horrible model and itās about time people stopped worshipping this false idea.
As much as Iād love to earn money playing video games myself, this model that all of these blockchain games have adopted is unrealistic and only puts a bad name on crypto.
Anyone who actually played a Massively Multiplayer Online Game (MMO) in their life understands why this concept just doesnāt work. Unfortunately, the mass majority creating and playing these games arenāt actual gamers, which is why they donāt understand.
So, why canāt it work? After all the idea is pretty simple right? You play the game, earn whatever their native token or virtual material there is, sell it on an exchange and thereās your profit!
On paper, this idea works completely fineābut only in the short termā¦. All these P2E games are doomed from the get-go. Says who? Saysāthe economy.
AI and Robots Are Destined To Destroy The World
Although the idea of dystopian AI is a worry for another day (in our real world), in video game universes itās the problem of the present.
Bots have been destroying virtual economies for years! And thatās excluding blockchain games, which heavily restrict real-world trading (RMT). Even there they manage to annihilate the experience.
In the case of the P2E model, no economy also means no world altogether. If a gameās existence is centered solely around the market then this is inevitable.
If youāve played an MMO, youāll recognize that P2E games utilize the āgrindyā or āfarmingā aspect of video games. These refer to monotonous gathering tasks that are very simple but require lots of reactive effort and time as opposed to skill (almost like your average job :P).
Thereās nothing inherently wrong with that. Might be a bit boring but heyā¦ you do you. The major issue though, is that you as a player will be easily replaced by bots.
Youāve seen them. On Twitter, Facebook, RuneScape, World of Warcraft, and basically any social community. The botting and AI technology is just too advanced to stop within virtual worlds.
If multi-billion dollar companies like Twitter or Blizzard canāt handle it, what chances do you think a small indie developer has? These bots will quite literally take your job.
And since you canāt stop them you cannot possibly outperform them. They do not sleep, they do not tire. They donāt require food or even a water break. Theyāre simply unstoppable and willing to work for a fraction of whatever you expected.
How exactly do bots ruin the economy?
An army of bots will do 2 things:
- Grind every commodity into worthlessness
- Drive away the majority of the player base
Every market works on supply and demand and virtual games arenāt an exception. Bots will āfarmā out all of the tokens, items, collectibles, and basically anything thatās worth something.
This will create a massive disparity between supply and demand, which will of course force all of the different bot operators to compete with each other. Theyāll constantly undercut each otherās prices and inevitably, drive the value into the ground.
An average player will need to compensate each day for the plummeting prices with hours of extra āplay timeā, which will consequently feel more and more like work each day.
In the end, itāll be pure slavery with only the people at the top making money. Starting with the developers descending into different bot operators in an almost pyramid-like manner. Sound familiar?
The Iceberg Goes Deeper
At the end of the day, P2E games function similarly to malicious crypto miners. Not the kind that makes crypto for you but the kind thatās secretly injected into programs and you unknowingly download. These programs mine crypto and send it to someone else at your computing expense.
This used to be what people were scared of and what they avoided. Nowadays though, not only are people downloading them willingly but they even help it in the guise of earning money themselves.
Because thatās what P2E games are. Little programs that ultimately make money for the big fish with the illusion of looking out for the little guy.
So is earning while gaming impossible?
Of course not. Anything is possible. Iāve made quite a bit of money playing a wide range of games myself, including centralized titles.
The blockchain does make it much easier too. However, the main point is that most of the focus in blockchain gaming is on P2E games, which is, as you might have guessed, a very faulty model in my opinion. Borderline predatory in most cases.
Not all of them are obviously like that. Axie Infinity or even some of the upcoming ones like Ember Sword do seem like very genuine projects. But this āchasing the dragonā styled gameplay is just not it. Thatās for sure.