EMPIRES Opens Registrations, Betting on Solving the Economic Problem of Web3 Games
Almost all crypto games from the last cycle made pretty much the same promise: play, and you will earn. In practice, most produced economies where the only real demand came from the next speculator, and when new buyers stopped arriving, the tokens, and the games, tended to collapse with them.
Black Ice Studios opens registrations for EMPIRES, a browser-playable strategy MMO, on a different premise: an in-game economy with a real client. The equipment and cosmetics that players craft in EMPIRES are consumed by players of the studio's sister game, CITADELS, a soon-to-be-released AAA extraction shooter, so the demand is expected to come from those who need equipment to survive a raid, not from traders betting on a token's rise.
A Corporate War on a Dead World
EMPIRES puts players in the shoes of Freelancers on Ortus, a crater-marked world ruled by an authoritarian corporate alliance called the Consortium. Players claim territories on a hexagonal sector map, send autonomous vehicles to prospect for Unbiquadium, the resource on which everyone relies, and build forges and fabricators that turn raw materials into weapons, armor, machines, and valuable cosmetics. They can form player-owned Corporations, pool treasuries, and engage in what the studio calls a supply chain war: every finished item is at the end of a production chain that a competitor can cut. The design allows for different temperaments: prospectors and industrialists, corporate leaders governing from an Excel spreadsheet, traders profiting from others' wars, with Corporations cooperating internally while fighting each other for land and resources.
The Economy Has a Client
At the heart of the design is the junction between the two games. In CITADELS, players land on hostile maps, loot gear and equipment, and try to escape before being killed, losing everything they were carrying if they fail. This constant flow of equipment is what EMPIRES is designed to supply: EMPIRES players sell production permits, equipment, and cosmetics that CITADELS players buy and use. The studio refers to this cycle internally as a "real economy," in stark contrast to the speculative markets that defined the previous wave of crypto gaming.
"The last wave failed because the only buyer was the next buyer," said Adrien David, CEO of Black Ice Studios and former lead producer on Space Engineers. "We have integrated demand into the games themselves. The equipment and cosmetics you craft in EMPIRES are used by real players fighting to survive in CITADELS --- and all the technical aspect is underneath, out of the way."
A Blockchain You’re Not Supposed to Notice
For a title partly aimed at crypto-native players, EMPIRES makes significant efforts to hide its infrastructure. Registration takes just one click; players can opt for a custodial wallet and play in any browser without ever encountering gas fees or secret phrases --- an approach the studio calls "Web3 Invisible." Beneath the surface, important actions are settled on-chain; land prospecting and research results rely on verifiable randomness, so outcomes can be audited rather than just trusted; and Corporations function as on-chain entities with their own treasuries and governance votes. The economy revolves around Unbiquadium, an in-game resource, as well as $ASH, a governance token.
What’s Still to Prove
Several of the most ambitious elements remain on the roadmap rather than in the current version. The studio says it plans to implement zero-knowledge mechanics like "fog of war" to enable private and competitive PvP, and that it intends to anchor an increasing share of the economy's reserves in real assets over time --- both presented as future works. And the base stake of the model is, by design, unproven: the economy of EMPIRES only works if CITADELS attracts enough players to generate real demand. Tying the fortunes of the two games also doubles the studio's exposure --- if the shooter disappoints, the "real economy" of the strategy game finds itself without its client. Black Ice bets that its reputation exceeds the threshold; its team includes developers credited on titles such as Call of Duty, Halo, Rainbow Six: Siege, Cyberpunk, and ARK.
Registrations for the first playable version of EMPIRES are open now at playempires.com, with early access at playempires.com/sales; CITADELS can be added to the wishlist on Steam ahead of its own launch. Whether the bet of the two games pays off will take a live economy to confirm --- but it’s a more concrete response to the demand problem of Web3 games than most of the last waves have managed to offer.
Disclaimer: This content is provided for general branding and informational purposes only and doesn't constitute financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. Any events, rewards, online events, or related information mentioned herein should not be considered a recommendation, solicitation, or invitation to purchase, sell, trade, or otherwise deal in any crypto assets or to use any services. Crypto assets are highly volatile and may result in loss. WEEX services and online events may not be available in all regions and are subject to applicable laws, regulations, and eligibility requirements. You are responsible for ensuring that your use of WEEX services complies with local laws and for carefully assessing the risks before participating in any crypto-related activities.
You may also like

SBI, DigiFT, and Startale Launch PoC for Stock Fund Using JPYSC Token

Who Has the Power to Pause AI?

Professor Sakai of Keio University Discusses "The Century of Prediction Markets: Social Implementation of Collective Intelligence" at WebX 2026

What is the Howey test? The 1946 rule that decides which tokens are securities

Important News from Last Night and This Morning (July 14 - July 15)

Sun Yuchen's Keynote at WebX 2026: TRON is Advancing Towards AI-Driven Financial Infrastructure

UK Government Announces Major Easing of DeFi Tax Regulations! Aave Founder Stani Kulechov Publicly Praises

What is a token unlock? Vesting, cliffs, and supply schedules explained

Suspension of Telegram's 't.me' Domain Affects Access to TON Wallet and Cryptocurrency Ecosystem

Understanding Circle Founder Jeremy Allaire's Paper on the 'Agent Economy': Insights into How Economic Structures Will Transform in the Next Decade

The Age of Exploration for HashKey On-Chain: Fully Embracing RWA and Building a New Paradigm for On-Chain Financial Infrastructure

On-Chain Financial Strategies of the Three Mega Banks: How Stablecoins and AI Will Transform the Future of Banking | WebX 2026

US Banking Associations Demand Strengthening of Stablecoin Interest Regulations

Three Positive Conditions in the Bitcoin Market, but Recovery Trend Remains Uncertain - Wintermute

A Year Later, 'Lean Ethereum' Sets Off Again: What Does Ethereum Aim to Deliver?

NEAR Governance Vote To Scrap Gas Rebates Puts Developer Incentives Under Review

eToro’s Extended Stake Shows Retail Brokers Are Still Eyeing On-Chain Derivatives

Deflation in the US in June: What It Means for Your Investments

OFAC FirstVPN Sanctions Show Crypto Enforcement Is Moving Up The Infrastructure Stack

Kraken Card Launch Brings Everyday Crypto Spending Back Into The Exchange Race

Ethereum Research Thread Puts Sybil Resistance Back In Focus For Decentralized Networks

Predicted 'Apocalypse of DeFi Hacks' Did Not Occur; Is This Sector Safer in the Age of AI?

Fed's Barr: AI Boosts Productivity but May Widen Wealth Gap

Tether targets $11T payroll market with major USAT expansion push

NFT Skill Registry Proposal Gives ERC-721s A More Active Role In On-Chain Automation

Starknet Memory Protocol Draft Puts User-Owned AI Data On The Crypto Agenda

Circle Bets on Argentina and Aims to Bring Stablecoins to the Financial System

Chainalysis Adds Automatic Stablecoin Support As Compliance Teams Face Token Sprawl

CoinFund's David Pakman says crypto hasn't solved tokenomics










