Mining Cryptocurrency: Crypto Mining Business Model Used Worldwide

Mining Cryptocurrency: Crypto Mining Business Model Used Worldwide

The most popular way to get into crypto is to start mining crypto. There are a few other ways in which you can earn crypto without spending any fiat money, but serious money is made by mining cryptocurrency.

Mining cryptocurrency like Bitcoin is an automatic process, a decentralized mechanism that creates Bitcoin out of thin air to provide rewards to miners for processing transactions. The result: a booming business in mining.

All you need to get into the business of mining cryptocurrency is a rack of high-speed computers and access to electricity anywhere in the world and you can essentially create cryptocurrency, simply by running free software.

Crypto Mining Business Model #1: Legal, Competitive Mining

In the early days of crypto, mining was a business for small-time entrepreneurs. The business soon became increasingly competitive, as miners purchased massively powerful computers while scaling up their operations to remain profitable.

Risks seemed low, as the original Bitcoin software was supposed to account for falling prices, making it easier to mine as the number of miners remaining in the game dropped, thus ensuring that there would always be enough miners to process all the transactions.

Then the Bitcoin crash came, severely limiting the ability for miners to churn out crypto while still making a profit. As it turns out, inefficiencies in the mining algorithm, combined with market pressure on the transaction fees that were supposed to partially compensate miners, has led to a squeeze on the ability for anyone to mine at a profit.

Legal crypto mining using electricity at market rates is now becoming increasingly unfeasible, even in places like Iceland, which have exceptionally low electricity rates combined with temperatures conducive for data centres filled with heat-generating computers.

Crypto Mining Business Model #2: Subsidized Electricity Mining

In Washington State, hydroelectric power generates far more juice than locals can consume, thus attracting a booming business in crypto mining.

“The region’s five huge hydroelectric dams, all owned by public utility districts, generate nearly six times as much power as the region’s residents and businesses can use,”

Explains Politico journalist Paul Roberts. “Most of the surplus is exported, at high prices, to markets like Seattle or Los Angeles, which allows the utilities to sell power locally at well below its cost of production.”

By 2015, however, the Washington Bitcoin mining craze had run its course. “Margins grew so thin—and, in fact, occasionally went negative—that miners had to spend their coins as soon as they mined them to pay their power bills,” Roberts adds.

If not Washington, then, what about Iran? “I come across some very interesting cases,” notes Mohsen Rajabi, an Iranian blockchain entrepreneur. “I recently set up a rig for a middle-aged customer who was not tech-savvy at all and had simply heard of mining and its potential profits. He wanted to start with ten devices installed at his factory because it can legally use extremely cheap industrial electricity.”

Crypto Mining Business Model #3: Steal Electricity

The electricity is the greatest cost of the mining business. If you can manage to cut that out, that chances of making a profit increase at once. In the early days of Bitcoin, college kids would use the university electricity to power their rigs from their dorm.

Today, in contrast, stealing electricity is serious business. “A Shanxi Datong [China] man named Xu Xinghua stole power from the poles near the West Second Plant of the Kouquan Railway, which was borrowed from November to December 2017,” reports Liu Yulin, writing in Chinese for The Paper.

“The coin ‘mining machine’ and three electric fans were operated for 24 hours,” she continues. “Xu Xinghua mined a total of 3.2 bitcoins, earning 120,000 yuan [$17,700], and the electricity generated by the stolen electricity was 104,000 [$15,340] yuan.”

What happened to the thief? “Xu Xinghua was sentenced to three years and six months in prison for committing theft and was fined 100,000 yuan [$14,750],” she reports. He also had to reimburse the electric company for the stolen power and forfeit his equipment.

This story is one of many, notable merely for the fact that the perpetrator was caught and the story appeared in the local paper. Many more instances are sure to be out there, as yet unreported.

Another popular, if potentially unintentional, way to steal electricity: set up a mining operation, take the profits, and then go out of business.

This is the story of one of the Washington State mining companies. “U.S.-based bitcoin mining firm Giga Watt has declared bankruptcy with millions still owed to creditors,” writes Yogita Khatri for Coindesk. “Creditors include the utilities provider in its Douglas County [Washington] base, having a claim of over $310,000, and electricity provider Neppel Electric, which is owed almost half a million dollars.”

One silver lining: there may be a possibility these stiffed utilities will eventually get some of their money back, as Giga Watt raised about $22 million in its ICO – and it’s possible the scammers were unable to spend or secret away all of the proceeds before the bankruptcy shut them down.

Crypto Mining Business Model #4: Cryptojacking

Illicit cryptocurrency mining (known as cryptojacking), has surpassed ransomware as the most popular form of cybercrime targeting enterprises.

Cryptojacking means introducing crypto mining software onto a target victim’s computer without their knowledge. The software starts generating crypto for the hacker while stealing processing power and electricity from the victim.

The cryptojacking problem, in fact, is much worse than it was when I wrote my article Top Cyberthreat Of 2018: Illicit Cryptomining in March 2018.

“Despite the volatility in the value of various cryptocurrencies, the trend of illicit cryptocurrency mining activity among cybercriminals shows no signs of abating,” according to David Liebenberg, senior threat analyst at Cisco Talos.

One of the reasons why the cryptojacking problem is getting worse is because the malware is getting better. One such package: Rocke. “Talos assesses with high confidence that Rocke will continue to leverage Git repositories to download and execute illicit mining onto victim machines,” continues Liebenberg.

Git repositories are where most of today’s enterprise software developers store and manage their source code – but such repositories are not Rocke’s creators’ only target. “It is interesting to note that they are expanding their toolset to include browser-based miners, difficult-to-detect trojans, and the Cobalt Strike malware [malware that leverages Cobalt Strike penetration testing software].”

Crypto Mining Business Model #5: Evading Sanctions

Another cryptocurrency mining business model is to evade sanctions.

For example, a pair of Iranian Bitcoin miners tried to take advantage of their local USD exchange rate: “At the time we bought the mining device, the rate of the US dollar in Iran was still quite high, so we figured we would make about $90 to $100 a month,” explains Ali Hosseini, an Iranian miner. “The cost of electricity is relatively low in Iran, so the math seemed viable.”

Hosseini’s cousin also spoke up. “Foreign exchange rates and Bitcoin prices have fallen and our profits have been slashed, but we’re not seeing losses yet,” says Pedram Ghasemi, another Iranian miner. “According to my calculations, the US dollar must drop below 110,000 Rials [about $2.60] and Bitcoin must be down to $2,000 for us to really lose.”

Another example is North Korea. Priscilla Moriuchi, a former top National Security Agency official and now director of strategic threat development at Recorded Future, estimates that North Korea may have earned up to $200 million in 2017 mining crypto.

How, then, would North Korea turn that crypto into hard currency? “North Korea has such extensive criminal networks that have been well-established for decades to facilitate illegal activities,” Moriuchi says. “If Pyongyang were able to cash out into physical currency, it would be relatively easy for them to move that currency back into North Korea and to buy things with the physical currency. I would bet that these coins are being turned into something — currency or physical goods — that are supporting North Korea’s nuclear and ballistic missile program.”

Crypto Mining Business Model #6: Mining at a Loss

This doesn’t come out as a rational business model, unless ensuring that crypto transactions can be completed is your primary motivation.

We know that crypto is (or at least use to be) essential to the operation of the Darknet. Many illegal businesses and organized crime syndicates depend on the successful exchange of crypto to move their contraband.

Should the value of Bitcoin or any other crypto drop to the point that no one could make money mining it, then such syndicates would likely step in to fill the void – mining at a loss to keep the crypto running.

For all the crypto fanatics out there, therefore, there is a reason to take heart – there’s no way crypto values will ever drop far enough for mining to cease. Organized crime wouldn’t let that happen.

Blockchain: How A 51% Attack Works (double spend attack)

Blockchain: How A 51% Attack Works (double spend attack)

Let’s give a simple example to illustrate how a 51% attack works (double spend attack):

You spend 10 Bitcoin on a luxurious car. The car gets delivered a few days later, and the Bitcoins are transferred from you to the car company. By performing a 51% attack on the Bitcoin blockchain, you can now try to reverse this Bitcoin transfer. If you succeed, you will possess both the luxurious car and the Bitcoins, allowing you to spend those Bitcoins again.

Before explaining how this can happen, you should be acquainted with the blockchain mining process and technology.

51% Blockchain Attack (double spend attack) Definition

The ability of someone controlling a majority of network hash rate to revise transaction history and prevent new transactions from confirming.

What does this mean?

A 51% attack or double-spend attack is a miner or group of miners on a blockchain trying to spend their crypto’s on that blockchain twice. They try to ‘double spend’ them, hence the name. The goal of this isn’t always to double spend crypto’s, but more often to cast discredit over a certain crypto or blockchain by affecting its integrity.

Why can a 51% blockchain attack theoretically work?

As we have banks and the states central institution, the blockchain governs using a distributed ledger, where it can store all kind of information, like transactional data, in the case of cryptocurrency. That is why we call blockchains to be decentralised.

The protocol of the Bitcoin blockchain is based on democracy, meaning that the majority of the participants (miners) on the network will get to decide what version of the blockchain represents the truth.

How does a 51% PoW attack work?

Each transaction sent by a bitcoin owner is put into a pool of unconfirmed transactions. The miners select the transactions which will be part of the block. The miners need to find the solution to a very difficult mathematical problem (using computational power) to be able to add this block to the blockchain. This is the process of hashing.

Of course, the bigger the computational power of a miner, the better the chances are for him to be the first to find a solution. When a miner finds a solution, it will be broadcasted (along with their block) to the other miners and they will only verify it if all transactions inside the block are valid according to the existing record of transactions on the blockchain.

Note that even a corrupted miner can never create a transaction for someone else because they would need the digital signature of that person in order to do that (their private key). Sending Bitcoin from someone else’s account is therefore simply impossible without access to the corresponding private key.

How does a 51% blockchain attack start? With a corrupt miner!

A corrupt miner will try to reverse transactions. Why is a miner called malicious? Because when a miner finds a solution, it is supposed to be broadcasted to all other miners so that they can verify it whereafter the block is added to the blockchain (the miners reach consensus). a corrupt miner can create his own version of the blockchain by not broadcasting the solutions of his blocks to the rest of the network. There are now two versions of the blockchain.

The corrupted miner is now working on his own version of that blockchain and is not broadcasting it to the rest of the network. The rest of the network doesn’t pick up on this chain, because it hasn’t been broadcasted. It is isolated of the rest of the network.

The corrupted miner can now spend all his Bitcoins on the truthful version of the blockchain, the one that all the other miners are working on. On the truthful blockchain, his Bitcoins are now spent. Meanwhile, he does not include these transactions on his isolated version of the blockchain. On his isolated version of the blockchain, he still has those Bitcoins.

Meanwhile, he is still picking up blocks and he verifies them all by himself on his isolated version of the blockchain. This is where all trouble starts… The blockchain is programmed to follow a model of democratic governance (the majority).

The blockchain does this by always following the longest chain, after all, the majority of the miners add blocks to their version of the blockchain faster than the rest of the network (longest chain = majority). This is how the blockchain determines which version of its chain is the truth, and in turn what all balances of wallets are based on. A race has now started. Whoever has the most hashing power will add blocks to their version of the chain faster.

The corrupted miner will now try to add blocks to his isolated blockchain faster than the other miners add blocks to their blockchain (the truthful one). As soon as the corrupted miner creates a longer blockchain, he suddenly broadcasts this version of the blockchain to the rest of the network. The rest of the network will now detect that this (corrupt) version of the blockchain is actually longer than the one they were working on, and the protocol forces them to switch to this chain.
The corrupted blockchain is now considered the truthful blockchain, and all transactions that are not included on this chain will be reversed immediately. The attacker has spent his Bitcoins on a Lamborghini before, but this transaction was not included in his stealth chain, the chain that is now in control, and so he is now once again in control of those Bitcoins. He is able to spend them again.

This is a double-spend attack. It is commonly referred to as a 51% attack because the malicious miner will require more hashing power than the rest of the network combined (thus 51% of the hashing power) in order to add blocks to his version of the blockchain faster, eventually allowing him to build a longer chain.

And just for the fun of it, check the cost of the Proof-of-Work 51% Attack for some top cryptocurrencies.

What Can You Buy Using Cryptocurrency?

What Can You Buy Using Cryptocurrency?

Rumours of merchants accepting Bitcoin have been circulating for years. After all, everyone knows at least one-foot soldier who spreads the good word of Satoshi wherever they can find a listening ear.

So then, what can you actually buy with cryptocurrency? If you’re not counting on holding for that Lambo anytime soon, let’s see what you can get for a few satoshis.

Flights and hotels

Due to the explosive growth of the cryptocurrency ecosystem in the past nine years, it is now possible to travel the world by spending cryptocurrency.

Established travel agents such as CheapAir, Destinia  Expedia and Surf Air accept bitcoin as a payment method to book flights, car rentals, and hotels and for those who prefer to stay in an apartment when travelling can book accommodation using bitcoin (BTC) or ether (ETH) on CryptoCribs.

The growth of the bitcoin ATM market also means travellers are now able to convert their cryptocurrency into local currency in most major cities around the world.

Movies, games and app-based services

Microsoft dipped its toes in the waters back in 2014, when it started accepting Bitcoin for online game and app purchases on its Windows and Xbox online stores. After a lover’s quarrel over volatility last year, the tech powerhouse stalled payments but has since rekindled the flame and picked up where it left off. While the tech giant is yet to accept BTC across the board, their support carries some serious weight.

While you won’t be getting the latest Windows from Microsoft, there’s always a back door – Newegg will proudly sell PCs, hardware, software, and an arsenal of miscellaneous equipment for bitcoins. Whether you’re in the market for a mining motherboard or a fly-fishing rod, Newegg seems to have it.

Some musicians (Bjork, Imogen Heep) will let you download their music in exchange for cryptocurrency.

Did you know you can Play blockchain games for free and win cryptocurrency?

Online Services

Your classic offline businesses are usually the last to jump on the bandwagon, while traditionally web-based businesses are quicker to catch on to tech trends.

Web services seem to be leading the pack, and you can just about create an entire website using Bitcoin. First, grab yourself a domain name on Namecheap, and if you won’t settle for their hosting package, try HostWindsGlowHost or HawkHost.

Once you’ve laid out the bones for your new site you’ll want a fresh installation of WordPress, where you can lock down a sexy theme and plugins galore – all purchased using Bitcoin, naturally. If all of this sounds a bit too much, you can jump the queue over on Reddit and launch your project as a premium feature.

Bitcoins also jangle around the darker corners of the world wide web, where romance comes at a price. There’s SuicideGirls, an eerily named “adult” community, or if you’d rather do things the old-fashioned way jump on OKCupid for some online dating action – both accept Bitcoin as payment for membership.

Read more on How blockchain technology is used in non-cryptocurrency applications.

Furniture

Need to furnish your house or buy a special present for someone? Overstock was one of the first big retailers to start accepting bitcoin, back in 2014, and its founder – Patrick Byrne – is still one of the technology’s most active proponents.

Gold

Fancy some gold? Sharps PixleyAPMEX and JM Bullion will take bitcoin off your hands in exchange for bullion.

Food

The first Bitcoin transaction ever recorded was for pizza, and apparently, the novelty never wore off. Accepting bitcoin for pizza since 2013, Pizzaforcoins is a third-party intermediary that will happily take your BTC and convert that into doughy, cheesy goodness made by your vendor of choice. (If you live in the US.)

If you’ve got a hankering for something less greasy, there’s a chance your local Subway will convert your crypto-assets into a foot-long classic. One punter traded 0.04 BTC for a Chicken Bacon Ranch 4 years ago- that said, BTC payments don’t seem to be a franchise-wide policy (being left to the discretion of individual store owners).

School

If it’s knowledge you’re hungry for, several private and public universities, as well as a couple of New York preschools, accept bitcoin. I bet you would have never guessed what you can buy using cryptocurrency.

Legal and accounting

Some legal and accounting firms also accept payment for their services in the cryptocurrency.

Presents

If you want to use bitcoin to buy presents, the most obvious solution is gift cards, via Gyft or eGifter. The recipient will then be able to spend the gift card at one of a wide range of retailers.

Charities

Whether you’re looking to bolster transparency with WikiLeaks, build clean water solutions in Sub-Saharan Africa with The Water Project, or SaveThe Children, the number of charities and nonprofits accepting Bitcoin is growing every day. Take your pick from art, entertainment, NGOs, open-source projects, activism, and even religion- you can find a full, up-to-date list on Bitcoin Wiki

Of course, you could always buy yourself some happiness by donating to one of the bitcoin-accepting charities or crowdfunding sites, such as BitHopeBitGive or Fidelity Charitable.

Search for offline shops

For a list of offline stores near you that accept bitcoin, check this list of resources to help you spend BTC away from the keyboard:

Where to Spend Bitcoins UK – An all-encompassing directory of shops, pubs, websites and places that accept Bitcoin as payment, complete with a map function.
Use Bitcoins – A directory platform listing 5,000 registered businesses that accept BTC.
CoinMap – An interactive map of worldwide businesses accepting Bitcoin.
Spendabit – A search engine to help you find a retailer for a specific good (that accepts BTC).

What can you buy using cryptocurrency? – Conclusion

Slowly but surely, merchants are warming to the idea of our old friend Bitcoin and slapping up their “Bitcoin Accepted Here” stickers with glee. That said, the process will certainly take some time, with the full force of FUD, regulation, and tech challenges all holding back your average Joe from seeing Bitcoin as a credible payment method.

Before spending, sometimes you also need to think about how to acquire it. Earning Bitcoins might seem like a daunting task if you leave out the option of buying Bitcoin. Check out some platforms which will help you earn free cryptocurrency and Bitcoin.

As an early adopter, sometimes you have to count the wins. While we are a long way off from BTC being as good as cash, there are some heavy hitters on this list that are bound to put the scent of FOMO in the air, jump-starting a mad scramble for competitors to join the crypto revolution.

Until that glorious day, your best bet is a Bitcoin debit card, which you can use just about anywhere that accepts regular old Visa. Try SpectroCoin, Uquid or Cryptopay, and you’ll be swiping and spending your satoshis like nobody’s business.

Crypto adoption through games: How do blockchain games work?

Crypto adoption through games: How do blockchain games work?

Blockchains provide a useful tool for gamers for various reasons including decentralized asset exchanges, verifiable scarcity of virtual objects and collectables, fast and secure payment networks, and the ability for developers to properly monetize their creations. Gaming is a transforming industry, which many believe that it will ease the adoption of crypto. So how can crypto adoption through games work?

One of the most apparent benefits of cryptocurrencies for gaming is their utility as fast and secure payment networks. The payment benefits of cryptocurrencies are especially useful for eSports, creating native in-game tokens, and driving seamless transactions on decentralized exchanges.

Remember that blockchain games are different than crypto games. Most online sources confuse the two, labelling all games with a cryptocurrency as blockchain games.

The search for solutions to providing sustainable and fun blockchain-based games has led to some exciting innovations in blockchain scalability and asset creation.

Bitcoin Games Grow into Blockchain Games

Although Bitcoin was slowly and surely being integrated into many low budget games, and although it was booming within the gambling sector, purely blockchain-based games, which relied on the technology itself were absent and still lagging far behind.

Booms and busts wracked the price of Bitcoin and various scandals such as the collapse of Mt. Gox slowed development and innovation, as it significantly tarnished the image of Bitcoin in the short term and created anxiety around delving too deeply into crypto-based technology. But is this enough to contribute to crypto adoption through games?

Blockchain game features

Gamers were some of the early adopters of cryptocurrencies as they were already familiar with many in-game virtual currency models and saw the benefits of integrating cryptocurrency networks into the domain. The eSports industry is booming, and it is only a matter of time before its rise is meaningfully coupled with cryptocurrency payment systems and decentralized models.

The blockchain is ideal for hosting games for a variety of reasons, including the fact that it is easy to represent fungible and non-fungible assets in the form of tokens. These can be game characters and other digital assets, for example, 3D role-playing heroes and items, such as weapons and armour in CryptoFights. Other fantasy football games, like FootballCoin, offer collectable football players and stadium cards.

Another reason for gaming on the blockchain is the decentralized and transparent nature of the underlying platform, which has the potential to convert gaming in a fair and open process. After all these past accomplishments, games are getting into crypto, because crypto adoption through games is the next step.

One of the earliest games that did find some success within the Bitcoin game space, however, was Dragon’s Tale, launched on July 12th, 2013, by eGenesis.

Dragon’s Tale is still ongoing and still using Bitcoin but in a more simplistic, raw way. Within the game, players can spend and use Bitcoin to perform various microtransactions, while at the same time, capable of withdrawing their in-game currency, thus creating a real-world economy for their player base.

Traditional video games continued to struggle to find a home for blockchain games, but one sector of the “gaming” economy had little to no trouble at all in adopting Bitcoin as a close partner.

The gambling sector, most notably online poker was under intense pressure via various sanctions and laws that outlawed US citizens from partaking and making bets with real-world currency.

Obstacles Facing Blockchain Gaming

The primary obstacle facing the intersection of blockchain and gaming for most games which are based on the Ethereum platform is very clear, scalability. The same problem that is facing the broader industry is inhibiting the sustainability and actual usefulness of current blockchain-based games.

DappRadar is an excellent tool for evaluating the activity of decentralized applications built on top of Ethereum and demonstrates a glaringly obvious lack of users for blockchain games and decentralized asset exchanges.

While still in the early stages, the trend represents an overall lack of sustainability for blockchain-based games at the moment. Gas costs on Ethereum can be prohibitively high during times of network congestion, and many once hopeful gaming dapps have fallen into obscurity after launch.

Centralized games and gaming platforms have clear advantages over blockchain-based games right now. However, interesting hybrid solutions such as Ethereum-based Gods Unchained may provide some insights into how centralized and decentralized models can be combined.

Gods Unchained runs on a centralized server and is powered by Unity, indistinguishable in gameplay from the majority of games today; however, the cards are non-fungible ERC-721 assets on the blockchain that can be traded in decentralized marketplaces.

Another problem resulting from scalability limitations is the current scope of games that can be created on a blockchain network. Slow network speed and lack of developer activity have led to many games being simple iterations of popular mobile games or collectable-focused games. This is by no means a long-term problem though as some fascinating projects such as Decentraland focus on creating three-dimensional worlds and games are beginning to shift towards more ambitious goals.

Blockchain Games Find their Stride

For the developers of CryptoKitties, the timing of the launch of their game couldn’t have been better. Bitcoin was reaching new highs daily, and interest for anything Bitcoin-related was exploding.

This simple game, although humorous as it is, was actually quite groundbreaking and history-making, as it was the first major breakout game to be based on the blockchain technology, unlike most of its predecessors, which merely incorporated the Bitcoin “currency” into their gameplay via microtransactions.

This blockchain game allowed users to create, breed and collection CryptoKitties, which they 100% owned and were based on the blockchain. This meant that they could be transferred and sold to others who had an interest.

Essentially, these cats were and are their own form of cryptocurrency. Which means they have tangible and real value.

How much value, you ask? That depends on the CryptoKitty in question. Prices vary from basically worthless to over $100,000. Crazy, I know.

Blockchain Games Are Here to Stay and Help Crypto Adoption

Currently, the only thing slowing down the rapid expansion of Bitcoin and blockchain games is the current setbacks affecting the price of Bitcoin and cryptos in general. Confidence has sagged in tangent with their crash in prices over the course of 2018.

One main reason so many big companies bet on this blockchain games is also the appeal they play in front of the mass population. Some of them will help their users earn free cryptocurrency, while others can help you expand your crypto fortune.

However, the blockchain technology is here to stay and like Pandora’s box, once opened, it can never be put back in again. The possibilities are just too vast and too powerful.

Blockchain games are going to continue to rise, as developers find new and unique ways to apply this revolutionary technology, making it work both for them as a business and the consumer. No matter what, the technology will model the industry and will contribute to crypto adoption through games.

Blockchain games which you can play for free and win cryptocurrency

Blockchain games which you can play for free and win cryptocurrency

Free crypto? Yes, there are some blockchain games which you can play for free and win cryptocurrency. Remember, consistency is key!

Games have been part of our human experience and present in all cultures around the globe for over 4000 years. As new technologies got discovered, many used the power of games to try to teach or to redefine values. Today, we see the blockchain community doing the same, adopting the same technique. Blockchain games are real, free to play and you can win cryptocurrency by playing. Check these free blockchain games and start playing to earn free cryptocurrency. Additionally, check out other methods to get free cryptocurrency.

A game is a structured form of play, usually undertaken for enjoyment and sometimes used as an educational tool. Games are sometimes played purely for entertainment, sometimes for achievement or reward.

We’ve found some ways to earn Bitcoin without depositing one single Satoshi of your own. We researched some blockchain games, which you can play for free.

Every single game listed in this article is free to play. No deposit required. So let’s talk about some games that are actually fun to play. Some require a bit of skill, while others need just some luck.

Spells of Genesis – Playable Crypto Assets

The longest-running Bitcoin RPG to date, Spells of Genesis is everything you ever wanted in a Bitcoin RPG game and more. You can play this amazing RPG on both desktop and mobile devices. This RPG mixes the trading card game genre, with a strategy based game, as well as implementing arcade-style gaming elements.

spells of genesis

Spells of Genesis game developed by a Swiss-based company named EverdreamedSoft. This game use BitCrystal as a premium currency, include card as assets are stored on Blockchain but not on the player account.

You’ll need to collect, trade, and combine orbs in order to build the strongest gameplay deck you can in order to test them against other opponents while exploring the vast world of Askian.

Unlike other free Bitcoin RPG games, players are able to actually own their in-game items and cards outside of the game itself on the blockchain. Now keep in mind that you can exactly earn Bitcoin directly within the game, however, you do build up a collection of rare cards, which when fully upgraded, can be stored on the Bitcoin blockchain utilizing Counterparty protocol.

FootballCoin – In-game gains with crypto collectables

If you know everything about the biggest football leagues in Europe and you can put together a winning team, then this fantasy football manager game is for you. FootballCoin gives you the chance to showcase your managerial abilities by allowing you to create your perfect football team.

footballcoin blockchain game

FootballCoin is the first game ever built entirely on blockchain and promises “A new and transparent crypto-economy”.

This blockchain game has its entire economy based on its own cryptocurrency, XFC. It features collectable footballers’ and stadium cards, you can participate in private contests with your friends and everything is based on real game stats. The teams with the highest-ranking win cryptocurrency!

The best part is that you choose how you spend your cryptocurrency. You can either spend it in the game or withdraw it and exchange it for any other crypto or fiat.

BitQuest

If you’re a Minecraft fan you’re going to absolutely go crazy over this game. If not, I guarantee you’ll still get addicted. This popular “sandbox game” allows players to build game worlds in which you define a story and have full control over all aspects of your creation.

bitquest blockchain game

The MineCraft style game includes Bitcoin as its main in-game currency which you earn by mining, trading, and interacting with other players.

Augmentors

Forged by the great powers of augmented reality and blockchain technologies, Augmentors puts you in control of fantastical creatures. Collect an army of powerful and rare creatures as you battle, train, buy and sell them. You, on Heroic One, will become the greatest Augmentors player in the augmented reality world.

Augmentors blockchain game

Every single creature in your legion has its own unique history, its own past, and all of its lore is stored in the blockchain.

Beyond the Void – In-game Cryptocurrency Economy

Beyond the Void is about to show us the power of a full-on, crypto-powered in-game economy.

Beyond the Void gives players a free-to-play interstellar Multiplayer Online Battle Arena. The secret sauce here is that the in-game economy is based on a cryptocurrency token called Nexium. What’s more, is that the in-game spaceships and items you buy are all registered on the blockchain. That means you really own your items.

This means that there is a marketplace for game items and currency that exists outside of the game that is both safe and transparent. This will come as a refreshing change for those games used on the market economies of games like World of Warcraft.

Beyond the Void’s cryptocurrency, Nexium (NXC), is a standard Ethereum ERC20 token. To get started, you’ll need to use an Ethereum wallet, such as Misk or Metamask, and load it with some Ethereum. The game assets and currency can be freely traded on the blockchain, but the developers have also made an online shop where you can buy new assets from the team or trade with other players.

beyond the void crypto game

Ethereum tokens like Nexium are popping up all over the Internet and in all kinds of games. Spend some time playing Beyond the Void and you’ll add to your token portfolio while leaving you the option to cash out if you want to move onto a new game.

Privateers Life – Closer to a Real Economy

The developers of Privateers Life are striving to take this idea even further and create an in-game economy that truly mirrors a real-life one. It’s a place where no goods can appear out of nowhere, but have to harvested, mined, or manufactured from the materials found the game.

This adds a whole new dimension to the game. You can be a part of the production of goods in the Privateers Life economy and sell them for crypto-tokens worth real money. You can think of it as the World of Warcraft gold-mining economy if all in-game items and commodities could be produced, and the gold couldn’t just appear out of nowhere causing rapid inflation.

Privateers Life crypto game

While playing the game, you can buy things using Ludem tokens (the currency of the game) in-game from other players or from the store.

However, the goods in the premium store need to be crafted from other players by collecting all of the materials and ingredients to make them. The developers take a cut of the items sold in the premium store, and also charge a tax on items sold on their “territory.” If you want to avoid this tax as an in-game merchant, you’ll have to buy your own island and really set yourself up.

Games have traditionally had to clamp down on the real-money economies that develop around popular multiplayer games. Games like this one are taking a completely different approach and actually encouraging it. As a player, you can easily start foraging, harvesting, mining, and crafting to earn yourself an in-game income that you can easily and safely cash out on.

Worldopoly – Augmented Reality Game-Based on Blockchain/DAG

When it comes to features, Worldopoly really does have it all. Augmented reality, geopositioning, MMORPG, gameplay, world-building, blockchain assets, and DAG. Worldopoly combines all of these factors and creates an immersive multiplayer mobile game.

Worldopoly crypto game

Imagine if the world was a Monopoly board you could view through your phone’s camera. You can buy streets and buildings and construct your own hotels on them. Now, imagine if you could sell parts of your empire for cryptocurrency worth real money, rent out your shop fronts to advertisers, and even raid or burn down competing players’ buildings.

Worldopoly uses two platforms for its cryptocurrency economy, Ethereum and Byteball. It uses Ethereum because it’s the most popular blockchain platform and many players are already comfortable using it. The second platform, Byteball, is offered because of its advantages over Ethereum when it comes to transactions.

The main problems with Ethereum are slow response times (~10 seconds) and high transaction costs (~$0.20-$1). These are big turn-offs for players. Byteball is a cryptocurrency platform that uses Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG) technology, which is technically not even blockchain technology. You can think of it as a generalization of blockchain technology, with more relaxed rules about how transactions can be organized. Byteball’s DAG platform allows for less than one second transaction time and basically free transactions of ~$0.0001. This is much more player-friendly.

Games need to be easy and cheap for players, at least to get started. That’s why platforms with rising costs and congestion problems like Ethereum may struggle to become the cryptocurrency platform of choice for games. Playing Worldopoly can give you exposure to more practical cryptocurrency technologies, like DAG, and save you some money in transaction fees while playing the game.

Spark Profit

This financial trading simulation has you making predictions on real financial marketplaces, including cryptocurrency markets as well as Forex. The more accurate your predictions are the more points you unlock because of it. You can then cash out your points to Bitcoin at any time.

spark profit blockchain game

Another great aspect to the platform is the fact that they provide you with a plethora of tutorials and resources in order to help you become a “real” successful trader.

You can earn up to a few hundred dollars worth of Bitcoin per month if you work hard at.

Altcoin Fanstasy

Practice and hone your skills as a digital trader without losing your hard-earned savings!

The game is very well laid out and has a professional interface that you’d expect to see from a fantasy sports website. The company includes both weekly and monthly contests where you can win real Bitcoin thanks to their partnerships.

altcoin fantasy blockchain game

Choose from a selection of trading contests hosted by various sponsors. View prizes from each contest and sign up to each one of them for free.

You begin a contest with 10,000 virtual US dollars. Your goal is to accumulate as much cryptocurrency (thus increasing your USD value) by the end of the contest period. If you can do just that, you’ll end up winning the contest and awarded your prize money in Bitcoin.


Do you know of any other free blockchain games we can add to our list? Let us know at contact@digitaltokens.io and we will be glad to update our list.

Where Is the Cryptocurrency Industry Headed in 2019?

Where Is the Cryptocurrency Industry Headed in 2019?

At the beginning of 2018, bitcoin was traded for about $13,500 after reaching an all-time high of $19,783.06 in December of 2017. After that, Bitcoin‘s price fell to about three-quarters of its peak value — and this cause other digital currencies to follow the trend. Ethereum, for example, fell from an early-year high of $1,300 to $91 as of Dec. 17, 2018.

Investor interest in digital currencies has dropped in recent months. Many early investors who were eager to make gains from the ‘cryptocurrency craze’ have since moved on to other ventures, leaving a smaller group of stalwart HODL-ers behind. (HODL – means HOLD (hold you crypto; don’t sell) is a common word used by the crypto community, which was actually a spelling mistake of one of the early adopters). Today, everyone is looking for methods to earn or win cryptocurrency and Bitcoin.

But there are still reasons to be optimistic. By some measures, institutional interest in digital currencies has actually increased over 2018. At the beginning of 2018, the question was how high these coins could get. Now, looking into 2019, the better question might be how this space will adapt in order to survive.

Institutional Investors Get in the Game

Although trade figures for individual investors are down in many cases, institutions are climbing on board in a significant way for the first time.

Institutional investors allow for significantly larger trading volumes than most individual investors, meaning that even if there are fewer trading partners transacting in the digital currency space, the industry can still sustain itself.

Bloomberg reported in October that institutional investors have replaced high net-worth individuals as the biggest buyers of cryptocurrency transactions worth over $100,000.

According to Bloomberg, traditional investors and buyers such as hedge funds have become more involved in the cryptocurrency market through private transactions. Bloomberg also notes that miners — the biggest sellers on the market — have begun scheduling regular coin sales instead of holding or offloading them during market rallies.

There are several potential developments projected to take place in 2019 that could significantly impact institutional participation in the digital currency market. If crypto is floated on the Nasdaq or a similar exchange, for example, it will immediately get a boost in reputation — and likely, value.

The Elusive Bitcoin ETF

For years, crypto enthusiasts have pined for a digital currency ETF (exchange-traded funds) available to mainstream investors in the U.S. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has repeatedly rejected or delayed bitcoin ETF applications to be decided upon at a future date.

One of the most talked about funds, by provider VanEck, has seen its final approval decision pushed back to February 2019. Some analysts believe that the approval of a mainstream bitcoin ETF could provide a significant jolt to the digital currency world, opening up the industry to investors eager to participate without some of the risks associated with buying and selling tokens directly. As of now, though, the future of VanEck’s fund remains to be seen.

Stablecoins Take the Lead

Stablecoins are digital tokens that are pegged to a fiat currency that act as hedging mechanisms against the potential decline of underlying cryptocurrency collateral prices — and they may just be the industry’s best hope going into 2019.

Stablecoins may see growth next year for two reasons: one, a result of the long-term instability of non-centralized tokens; and two, the current leader in the stablecoin industry, Tether, is positioned to be dethroned. As one of the earliest stablecoins to reach the mainstream, tether has suffered a number of highly-publicized growing pains while the sub-industry developed. Other stablecoins have already entered the field, aiming to wrench away its dominance.

What Do We Know for Sure?

While it’s difficult to say which, if any, digital currencies will see dramatic price gains in 2019, we can say with confidence that cryptocurrency is not going away anytime soon.

Blockchain, the underlying technology behind many cryptocurrencies, has spread far outside of the digital currency industry and is likely to see new applications this year.

Read more on Blockchain technology used in non-cryptocurrency applications

Governments and regulators will continue to grapple with how to best facilitate and control digital tokens. It’s possible that the heyday of cryptocurrencies has come and gone, but we do know one thing for sure: cryptocurrencies were once positioned to change the entire financial system.