Default Game: Part 2
How might we reimagine crypto not as finance tech but game tech
In Part 1, we looked at why crypto’s obsession with finance is holding it back. Now let’s explore what comes next—how to build apps that feel less like trading terminals and more like living, breathing games.
Money → game currencies
We’ve now created millions of crypto currencies, which from a money standpoint makes little sense. The world mostly needs two types: Bitcoin to store value and stablecoins to spend it.
But if we’re building games, it makes perfect sense. In both video games and gamified web2 apps you find endless currencies. There’s freely earned soft currencies such as World of Warcraft gold, Twitch channel points, or Duolingo Gems. Or purchased hard currencies like Fortnite V-Bucks, Roblox Robux, and Tinder Super Likes.
Crypto rails unlock new benefits for game currencies. Game currencies can now outlive their original game or app, be resold on the open market, or potentially unlock benefits across other apps.
Investment tokens → resources
If we change the frame to crypto assets, we find a few good investments amongst an endless graveyard of scams, memes, and other odious excrements. We need fewer investment assets and more resources.
Games have many types of resources, like xp to mark progression, potions consumed for powerups, player stats like health, or crafting materials like ore.
We can spend our resources, although “spending” in games means something entirely different than in finance. You spend hit points in battle and mana on spells. On social media you spend reputation (measured by likes and follows) on a hot take. And in Duolingo you spend a life on a poor pronunciation attempt.
Resources do not compete with each other for liquidity. So unlike investments, each new resource is positive sum insofar as it creates a good experience for users. Resources can be used to push us toward our goals, help us learn, find love, create art, or simply infuse more fun into our daily lives.
The game design mindset
Crypto has been largely blind to game currencies because our founding ethos is the antithesis of game design.
Our cypherpunk forefathers knew currency issuers (governments) are not to be trusted, and therefore money must be decentralized. But game designers know players are not to be trusted (as they will exploit the economy at first chance), and therefore game currencies must be tightly controlled.
These values translate into polar opposite designs. Stablecoins and Bitcoin are meant to be universal, frictionless, and noncoercive. They are designed for entire economies and have stable monetary policy.
Game currencies are specific to just one game, and sometimes can only purchase one type of item within that game. They intentionally have limitations to manipulate player behavior and emotions. And their economics can change on the fly to create new game mechanics.
The story of crypto thus far is what happens when libertarian design collides headfirst at internet speed with unchecked human nature. This was appropriate for finance. But in the realm of consumer apps, where users have plentiful choice and low switching costs, we should change our builder mindset to the benevolent authoritarianism of game design.
At Artizen our votes were originally tied to a user’s Artifacts. Everything was “onchain and decentralized” as was the obsession in 2021. But this presented challenges, like users being able to move Artifacts and therefore their voting power between wallets and double vote.
We decided to bring votes offchain and treat them more like a game currency where we were in complete control. And not only did this allow us to greatly improve and expand upon our voting mechanic (with lots more yet to come), it sparked the core idea behind this article: that crypto apps should be built around game design.
NFTs: Assets → Collectibles
If tokens are the currencies and resources we spend, NFTs are the collectibles we hold on to. But Default Finance has made us forget that holding isn’t just for making money.
At age 12, I gave away my Pokémon binder. At 33, I’d do anything to get it back. Not because of what they’re now worth to the market, but because of what they’re worth to me. Collectibles preserve memories and emotions–like the exact moment I opened a holo Charizard–which is worth more to me than the market would ever pay.
Let’s explore how to make NFTs fun again, with resale being emergent, not the only reason to play.
Imbue metadata with meaning
An NFT’s value should come from story, utility, or art, not manufactured scarcity. A 10k supply is so conspicuous that it breaks the fourth wall, signaling the collection is an investment. Design first and foremost around meaning and let scarcity be secondary. Better yet, turn trait rarities and supply caps into diegetically meaningful characteristics.
For example, I previously worked on charity Impact Certificates:
Imagine an NFT that represents a real planted tree: the attributes describe the type of tree and forest; the art is nature themed; the video is the proof of it being planted; and the collection size equals the actual number of planted trees.
By crafting meaningful characteristics you elevate your NFT from an ephemeral bull market hot potato into a timeless collectible.
(And your NFTs don’t have to map to the real world. Just give them in-world meaning within your app, like an item in a game.)
Upgrade the form factor
Just as physical collectibles come in many forms: Beanie Baby dolls, Pokemon cards, Tech Deck boards, Pog discs, and Tamagotchi gadgets, digital collectibles should likewise. Yet most NFTs are treated as artwork in most app UIs. This is Default Finance thinking, as art is a traditionally investable category (with auction houses and billionaire collectors), whereas only a select few game collectibles have ever achieved investment status.
Under the hood NFTs are shapeless data: a json file with a few key-value pairs. Let form follow function. Imagine new ways for NFTs to take form in your apps to create new collectible categories and new types of value.
Gestalts, not JPEGs
Most NFT collections treat only the image as the art and the rest of the metadata as supporting details. This is a skeuomorphic interpretation of NFT art.
The OpenSea standard has nine metadata slots, with attributes being an arbitrarily long list. Not to mention, you can add additional metadata beyond the standard. Instead of confining art to the image_url, treat each piece of metadata as a “brushstroke” and the entire NFT as the “painting.” The full potential of an NFT is not to be a JPEG but a gestalt of layered metadata.
And once you’ve created a gestalt, do not outsource your UX to the NFT marketplaces that display every NFT in identical cookie-cutter fashion: image here, title there, attributes below. It’s like crafting an elegant dish, then having it sorted into the little plastic compartments of a cafeteria tray on the way to the table.
At Artizen, what makes an Artifact meaningful will be different from project to project. Some will unlock rewards. Others will be standalone works of art. Some might be pieces of a larger whole, like characters or items in a story.
And, in time, we aim to enable every creator to authentically distill the essence of their project and create collectibles that their supporters cherish, regardless of market conditions.
Level-up your language
It’s not just the game resources themselves but the way we talk about them that shapes the user experience.
Imaginative limitation
If your app has users mint, stake, and burn you not only sound just like everybody else, you inherit the semantic shackles of these terms. Stake implies locking tokens to earn yield. But equip could unlock power ups, abilities, or cosmetic upgrades.
Users no longer care what is happening beneath the hood. Replace technical terms with whimsical ones to create a richer experience.
Finance pollution
Remove finance language, as it takes users out of the game and on to the trading floor.
Just because a token is onchain, doesn’t mean you have to call it by its $ticker. The $ticker suggests these things are like stocks, not game currencies. Your tokens can be called shards or essence, or any other name that creates immersion and thematically aligns with your app.
Do this across your entire app. Even universal terms like wallet can potentially be renamed to inventory to add unique flavor to your app.
App legibility
STEP’N, the gamified move-to-earn app, had users earning two tokens: $GST and $GMT. What the hell are GST and GMT? The names give no clue to their use. Games let us chop trees to get wood to build houses. Or collect herbs to make potions, which we know to be powerups.
Use familiar terms to keep your app intuitive. Users can keep track of dozens of game currencies, their uses, and conversion rates–if designed properly. But they will quickly get lost with just a few unfamiliar names or concepts.
From day one, set out to build a gamified experience. Ruthlessly delete adopted finance concepts that don’t belong. And only once you’ve created a fun and user-friendly experience can you intentionally add just the right amount of finance back in.
This guided us while building Artizen:
First create an app that is beneficial for creators and rewarding for fans.
Keep things user friendly and not too “crypto-y.”
And only once we have the basic foundation in place, add in an investment token that will help boost growth and funding platform-wide.
Add finance without sacrificing game feel
What if you want to give users ownership, juice user acquisition, or raise capital for your company? How can you add finance benefits without over financializing your UX?
The 60-30-10 Rule
In UI design, there’s a common default color ratio: 60-30-10. Sixty percent of the interface is whitespace. Thirty percent is black text. And just ten percent, the brand color, highlights key interactive elements.
We can apply similar thinking to add just the right amount of finance to our app economy.
60% - Currencies & Resources
Currencies and resources shape your core mechanics, controlling pacing, gating, or progression.
They’re lives like Duolingo Hearts; actions like Tinder Swipes; credits like Midjourney image generation requests; or soft currencies like World of Warcraft gold.
There are soft currencies that are typically freely earned through gameplay. And purchased hard currencies that buy premium loot and upgrades.
30% - Collectibles
Collectibles make games more rewarding.
They’re the unique Pudgy Party characters that grant in-game abilities; guns and attachments in Call of Duty; or League of Legends skins. These collectibles can potentially be resold but they should be primarily designed for players not speculators.
Collectibles can also be achievements like Duolingo streak milestones or GitHub contribution trophies but these should not be purchasable.
10% - Investments
Investments are your only assets designed primarily for speculation and financial return.
Investments should serve a purpose that is outside your core app ux, like rewarding early users, or boosting growth. Said differently, users should be able to have a complete experience without ever touching an investment.
If you want to weave investments into your app, you might reward investment holders with your non-investment game currencies. But don’t do the reverse: don’t primarily reward users in your volatile currency (e.g. play to earn) thrusting everyone into a PvP finance experience.
Is an asset a collectible or an investment?
If the resale price of the asset can go to $0 and still have value to users, it’s a collectible. But if the price goes to zero and users bring out the pitchforks, it’s an investment (or was anyway).
How 60-30-10 preserves game feel
Risk management
Default Finance apps nakedly expose users to financial risk. For example, they reward users with a volatile currency but fail to warn how the market can render the currency worthless.
With investments capped at 10%, you can now treat them more like ranked or hardcore mode, where users opt in and you signal there is permadeath risk. Not every player can handle hardcore so let users choose their preferred difficulty.
Value signaling
Too many Default Finance apps have a UX that is like: “stake your $butts utility token to earn $farts governance token, and also buy our $tp NFT collection.” Problem is, users quickly lose track of which is most valuable: the $butts, the $farts, or the $tp.
In games, users can keep track of many resources because each has a distinct purpose, presentation, and value. Save the $ticker symbol for your investment assets. Then use other design treatments to differentiate your currencies and collectibles.
Economic control
Investors and gamers are both ruthless. They exploit value gaps, discover arbitrage, hack, grief, and invent unanticipated strategies that destabilize entire economies. The difference is game developers can patch on the fly. Finance devs have limited options.
Control your currencies and resources in a smart contract that allows fine-tuned permissions, or keep them offchain altogether. Let collectibles be resold, but tightly manage the faucets, transaction fees, and the marketplace. Only let investments be at the whim of the market.
This way 60-30-10 ensures 90% of your app is mostly under your control for when your users inevitably find exploits.
What 60-30-10 looks like at Artizen
Artizen’s game currency is Votes (offchain soft currency). Users vote to boost potential funding for their favorite projects. Users get free votes on signup and can earn more by taking various actions throughout the app.
Our collectible is Artifacts (NFTs). Users financially support their favorite projects by buying their Artifacts. Artifacts grant rewards from the project, Artizen app utility, and potential financial ROI.
Lastly we have our ART token, which is an investment in the overall success of the platform and our creators. ART will grant in-app powerups but you won’t need to own it to take core actions.
Just like in UI design, 60-30-10 is a guide. Assets won’t always fall into these exact buckets but rather along spectrums of e.g. developer control or market risk. Proportion carefully to keep your economy healthy.
The end game
It’s time to try something different.
The consensus in Crypto is a future in which everything is a gamble. Let’s create a future in which everything is a game.
Ironically, once we stop focusing on finance we might all make more money. Because a rising tide of gamified apps that are fun and useful (and don’t rug our users) is the elusive PvE everyone has been searching for.
Love,
Nate Van Cleve
Head of Product at Artizen




Great essay from our head of product Nate!