When you hear Metamon NFT, a blockchain-based digital monster collection where players breed, battle, and trade AI-powered creatures. Also known as Metamon NFT game, it was once one of the most talked-about play-to-earn projects on the Binance Smart Chain. Unlike simple profile picture NFTs, Metamon was built around gameplay—your monster isn’t just art, it’s a character with stats, skills, and a fight history. You don’t just own it; you train it, upgrade it, and send it into battles against other players’ monsters. The whole system runs on smart contracts, meaning no central company can delete your monster or change the rules overnight.
But here’s the thing: NFT gaming, a category of blockchain applications where digital assets have in-game utility and economic value. Also known as play-to-earn games, it’s a space full of hype and broken promises. Metamon rode the wave of 2021’s NFT boom, drawing in thousands with promises of passive income. Players could earn tokens by winning battles, then trade those tokens for real money. But as crypto markets crashed and new games flooded the market, Metamon’s player count dropped. The rewards got smaller. The battles got slower. And many users realized they were spending more time farming tokens than actually having fun.
What’s left now isn’t dead—it’s changed. A core group of players still log in daily. Some still make small profits. Others just like collecting rare monster skins. The game still runs. The smart contracts still work. But the big money? The viral growth? That’s gone. And that’s why this collection of posts matters. You’ll find real breakdowns of similar NFT projects—some still alive, others collapsed. You’ll see how blockchain games, decentralized applications built on crypto networks where assets are owned by users, not companies. Also known as Web3 games, they rely on token economies that can vanish overnight succeed or fail. You’ll learn how to spot the difference between a game built for players and one built for speculators. And you’ll see how NFT collectibles, digital items with unique ownership records on a blockchain, often used in games or as digital art. Also known as crypto collectibles, they’re only valuable if someone else wants them hold up when the hype fades. This isn’t about chasing the next big drop. It’s about understanding what actually lasts—and what doesn’t.
The RACA x BSC MVBIII September Star airdrop rewarded Metamon NFT and MPB holders with $RACA tokens and Potion NFTs. Eligibility was based on NFT ownership during a strict snapshot, with no claims allowed for listed assets.