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Wildcard has just migrated its Wildpass NFTs to Ethereum mainnet and is planning to launch a token.

Wildcard is an upcoming, crypto-optional PVP battle game I’ve been following for years. You play as a character who can run around a 3D battlefield and throw cards that turn into powerful creatures that autobattle each other. People that spectate Wildcard matches can also be rewarded for watching and engage with the game.

Wildcard is being developed by Playful Studios, whose CEO and co-founder, Paul Bettner, worked on games like Words With Friends, Age of Empires, and Lucky’s Tale.

Why is Wildcard still not out yet after more than two years? Building a fun game is hard, but in Bettner’s view, building a good game with crypto ties-ins makes it even harder.

“I personally think it’s because it’s like building games while wandering through a minefield,” he tells me with a chuckle. “I’ve got two years of doing this under my belt and I’ve lost count of the number of times where unaligned incentives have attempted to hijack the game design and the focus [away from] just trying to create a truly fun game for a mass audience, because of crypto.”

Simply put, Bettner wants to make a game that you’ll choose over anything else in your Steam library because it’s more fun.

“Crypto has this gravity to it, it has this set of forces that are constantly trying to tug the design of a consumer application, or a consumer product, especially like a game, in certain directions,” Bettner added.

Source: Wildpass floor prices in Polygon

Wildcard initially released the Wildpass NFTs on Polygon back in 2023 — which gave up to 4,444 fans early access to the game’s development. Bettner calls these holders, and the game’s Discord server’s members, the “golden cohort.” They’re the core community he wants to make happy with the game.

Wildcard founders Bettner and his wife Katy Bettner previously attended the Game Developer’s Conference in the past as part of the Polygon booth, representing part of the chain’s gaming ecosystem (which then also included the now-cancelled shooter Deadrop, which launched Founders Passes on Polygon).

Now, the Wildpass NFTs are leaving Polygon. The team migrated them to the Ethereum mainnet on Monday and covered the cost of gas for the move for holders.

Bettner tells me they’re not committing to any one EVM chain moving forward, but they see the Ethereum mainnet as a good spot for the genesis NFTs because of the chain’s liquidity. The mainnet has higher transaction fees than Polygon, though.

“The Wildpass is not intended to be an asset that people are trading every five seconds,” Bettner explains. For future Wildcard NFTs or rewards meant to be traded frequently, it’s likely the team will pick another EVM chain with lower fees.

Wildpass stats from Magic Eden on Monday before the move to ETH mainnet

Their WC token, which hasn’t been released yet, is unlike anything we’ve seen recently because this token will be 100% community-owned, with zero team allocation or VC involvement. And it’s not a memecoin, either.

“I’m hoping we can set a new standard here,” Bettner shares. The token won’t have team or VC allocations because he doesn’t want the Wildcard community to feel pitted against the team or investors financially if investors suddenly decide to cash out and send the token nosediving.

The recent favorable regulatory climate with Trump’s election and the shakeup at the SEC has also made the team more comfortable launching a token.

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