Axie Infinity Co-Founder: Gaming Is the Key to Crypto Adoption


Sky Mavis has big plans to spur crypto adoption through NFT gaming, and Axie Infinity is just its first step.
Jeff Zirlin runs the largest NFT project ever created. His monster battling game, Axie Infinity, boasts 1 million users and has generated $2.1 billion in sales, and it costs about $1,500 just to buy enough monsters required to play it.
But like all successful startups that went from 0-100 in a hot minute, Zirlin is faced with the age-old question: how can Axie keep on growing?
For a game based around breeding, battling, and collecting player-owned assets, it’s an open question:
“Axie is only maybe 6% complete,” Zirlin said. “We’re looking at upgrading our battle system in the next six months. We also have a DEX on the way that I think our community is super excited about.” Zirlin also touted Axieland, a game similar to Clash of Clans, where players can harvest resources, build towns, and battle over territories.
Zirlin, said they want Axie to be the first game to be owned and operated by the community that plays it.
Sky Mavis, the Vietnamese development studio that created Axie, intends to eventually let its community choose who should continue to make the game and what features to implement—in other words, it will progressively decentralize.
“There are so many game developers out there in the world that have really good ideas for games,” Zirlin said. “But what do they lack? They lack a really strong IP; they lack the community that’s interested in playing it.” He said there are already people who don’t actually like the game but still make Axie content, art, and tutorials.
Zirlin thinks that DAOs, or decentralized autonomous organizations, are the key to making this happen. Axie’s governance token, AXS, earned by staking or from playing the game, is used to vote on key governance votes, such as which teams should receive funding. The project’s roadmap wants to delegate even more power to token holders.
Axie Infinity’s pole position will not go unchallenged. Hundreds of millions of dollars have been poured into crypto games like Sorare, Decentraland, and The Sandbox. And Zirlin thinks more competition is on the way. “Younger indie game studios will likely incorporate blockchain faster than larger ones,” he said.