For the better part of a decade, GameFi has more or less lived in a state of permanent becoming. Sure, it’s delivered the seeds of new ownership models and a player-driven value system, but it’s still struggled to escape the shackles of speculation and hype. As we reach the stage where blockchain gaming matures and the industry begins to shed its early excesses, the question is turning from “what is GameFi?” to “where does it go from here?
The answer can be found in the present. Just look at how decentralized technologies have and are continuing to reshape gaming—from video games to digital entertainment sectors like online gambling. Meanwhile, a number of companies have emerged that are spearheading a new direction for GameFi, one that moves it away from novelty (think: Crypto Kitties and worthless NFTs) into a powerhouse sector in its own right.
From Experiments to Infrastructure: How Crypto Has Already Shaped Gaming
But, before we look at where we’re headed—and how we’re headed there—it’s crucial to understand the trajectory the industry has experienced so far.
There’s no getting away from the fact that the very early days of crypto gaming were messy. And very often misunderstood. Initial play-to-earn experiments leaned heavily on token incentives, rather than compelling gameplay, producing systems that felt bolted on, instead of foundational to a gaming experience.
Underneath that fragmentation, though, was a quieter introduction to ideas that are now beginning to feel incredibly relevant: digital ownership, cross-platform values, and economies that center on players, not single publishers.
In video gaming, these ideas have filtered into mainstream discourse. Major studios and gaming brands have invested considerable sums in exploring blockchain and Web3, from Sony to Ubisoft. Players, too, have embraced decentralization and digital assets, indicated by the appetite for new releases like Gods Unchained and Alien Worlds.
Looking at other sectors within the gaming industry, we can use online casino gaming (aka iGaming) as another useful reference point for the reach and impact of blockchain and cryptocurrencies. We’ve seen crypto-native platforms emerge, normalizing provably fair systems with on-chain transparency, while these classic games themselves—from slots to roulette—have lent themselves well to modernization through decentralization.
Even casino platforms that predate the crypto-first entrants have still been able to integrate core aspects of blockchain and cryptocurrencies to benefit their players. This wider array of choice, say accepting BTC as a deposit and withdrawal method to play Bitcoin roulette, makes the sector that much more accessible to a broader demographic of players. In many ways, a platform simply being crypto-friendly ensures its relevance among digitally-savvy gamers. And for games like roulette, which is fast-paced and energetic, crypto is a natural fit, allowing for faster transfers and withdrawals than many traditional finance options. That makes the gameplay smoother and more fluid, something that definitely appeals to today’s players.
Of course, when it comes to Web3, one of the hottest topics is gaming marketplaces and persistent worlds. But the broader shift is less about that, and more about infrastructure—the role of blockchain as a tool to support ownership and player agency.
Who’s Shaping GameFi’s Next Era?

If GameFi’s early years were dominated by bold experiments but were unfortunately thin on delivery, its next chapter is being written by studios focused on gaming fundamentals.
Scaling Without Speculation
Mythical Games has quietly become one of the most strategically important companies in blockchain gaming—not because of flashy promises, but because of its focus on usability and scale. When FIFA Rivals launched in 2025 as the only officially licensed blockchain mobile game for the legendary football association, Mythical secured a rare combination of brand power and accessibility. Achieving one million downloads within weeks signalled something critical: blockchain games can reach mass audiences when crypto friction is removed.
Currently on the horizon for the company is the arrival of Pulse Marketplace, which prices digital assets in USDC, rather than volatile native tokens. By eliminating exposure to price swings, Mythical is reducing barriers for everyday players. Crucially, the studio isn’t positioning crypto as the product; it’s using it as a foundation for building diverse games with shared economic layers.
Building an Esports Stack, Not Just a Game
Where Mythical focuses on marketplaces and scale, Playful Studios is tackling one of GameFi’s hardest problems: sustainable competitive play. Case in point: its 2v2 card battler Wildcard, currently in Early Access on Steam. Here, the familiar tenets of RPG and competitive gaming are at play, with matchmaking and ranking systems prioritized over aggressive tokenization.
This is more than just sprinkling on a DeFi system to a PvP game. A clear aim for Playful is to integrate platform users, especially across the Thousands streaming and engagement platform, directly into game economies. It’s a path that only encourages viewership to grow into participation.
What the Next Phase of GameFi Looks Like
It’s pretty clear then, that the next phase of GameFi won’t be defined by tokens or buzzwords, but by restraint and integration—especially as cryptocurrencies themselves continue to defy destabilization.
Those gaming studios that are gaining traction in the space are doing so because they treat blockchain as a means to support better games, while across competitive gaming, live services, and digital entertainment sectors, blockchain technology is finally taking a back seat to let the games themselves do the talking.







