Voya Games has announced it’s bringing its debut game Craft World to Ronin.
Having recently announced $5 million of investment, Voya has previously been running Craft World, which was originally called Angry Dynomites Labs, on the Polygon testnet.
This test phase has seen over 240,000 wallets interact with the fully onchain idle resource management game, which is available on mobile or via web.
Due to launch on Ronin this summer, Craft World is labelled the “foundational component” to Voya’s wider vision of blockchain-enabled interconnected games and experiences, including an X-based AI-driven Tamagotchi-style game Dynogotchi.
These will be enabled by Craft World’s Dyno Coin, a utility-only token with an uncapped supply that’s purely designed to support transactions such as trading between the over 25 different resources used in Craft World, each of which is also an ERC20 token.
In this manner, Dyno Coins will launch via a community-first distribution that’s enabled through new title Project Voyager.
It’s a web-based metagame that will reward players for completing in-game quests and social farming with crystals, which are used to upgrade characters and assets, also determining players’ eventual Dyno Coin allocation.
Project Voyager will launch with a four-week season one that will end with Craft World moving from its testnet to launch on Ronin.
“Few ecosystems can match the long-term consistency and dedication to community that Ronin has shown. With a well-established token, a history of successful releases, and a truly engaged player base that has grown over time and not just during hype cycles, Ronin stands out as a network built to last,” said Voya Games’ CEO Oliver Löffler.
“While many chains struggle to retain users post-token launch, Ronin continues to thrive through sustained growth and an open ecosystem, making it the ideal choice for us to launch Craft World to the masses.”
“Craft World knows how to convert users and drive revenue; a rare combination in web3 gaming today. They’re best-in-class at monetizing through in-game ads rather than relying solely on purchases,” said Sky Mavis co-founder Jeff Zirlin.
“Their team will raise the talent bar on Ronin and push us closer to scalable virtual economies.”
For more information on Voya Games, visit the website and read the litepaper.