Quick Take
- Highly anticipated launches will rekindle short-term user activity on blockchain gaming platforms in the current quarter.
- The launch is planned for June 23 and May introduce new liquidity and utility to Web3 gaming and guilds.
- Unless it fixes core design and UX issues, high churn rates and scalability challenges risk undermining the Q3 momentum.
The Web3 gaming industry is gearing up to be busy in the next few months. Between new releases and planned in-game activities, Q3 2025 is filling up nicely. One of the most significant movers includes EVE Frontier, a new game that will likely garner the initial attention of blockchain gaming players. The launch of the game is timely as competition among decentralized game developers grows to enhance engagement by focusing on better gameplay and token rewards.
The second event is the end of the Axie Infinity Season 13. The seasonal nature of the game attracts a lot of players towards the end of the season, as they come back to claim some seasonal rewards and to acquire leaderboard benefits. Such announced events should increase the total wallet activity in blockchain gaming ecosystems, especially those that have already started recovering since Q2 2025.
Polemos Token Launch Signals Broader Infrastructure Growth
Besides the game-based advances, infrastructure growth is also attracting attention. A major token launch to look out for in the Web3 gaming infrastructure category is Polemos on June 23. Polemos seeks to establish itself as a GameFi educational and analytics platform and lending desk to help both gamers and guilds. The launch of the token could facilitate higher liquidity and utility models in partner games.
The level of integration will likely dictate the broader impact of the Polemos token it attains within the gaming networks in which it is utilized. It is also designed to extend beyond mere asset holding by rewarding activities that benefit the ecosystem, like content creation and high-level gameplay. As such, stakeholders will be monitoring closely to see how it will affect user retention and recurring engagement rates on platforms.
Scalability and High Exit Rates are a Concern
In spite of the planned launches and token events, the Web3 gaming industry still has systemic challenges. One of them is user retention. Industry statistics estimate that 75 percent of play-to-earn games have lost 90 percent of their users after 30 days. The tendency indicates the systematic flaws in user activity and fulfillment past the preliminary buzz.
The scalability and gas fees remain a problem as well. A lot of blockchain games remain queued on the networks with interstellar costs per transaction, which prevents playing casually and interacting in low-value scenarios. It is especially true of games built on Ethereum, but Layer-2 scaling solutions have caused specific ecosystems to be cheaper to utilize. However, these improvements have not been ideal to tackle the cost-related impediments, which affect onboarding and daily operations.
Sustainability Relies on Better Design and User Experience
Developers are looking into several solutions to solve these issues. Gasless transaction models are being adopted to allow zero-cost transactions to users while playing. Other platforms are also optimizing the onboarding experiences to make registration, creation of a wallet, and starting to play easier. These enhancements will target mainstream gamers who might not understand blockchain procedures.
However, sustainability is connected to the design of token rewards. High reward models and unsustainable in-game economies have caused hyperinflation and a loss of long-term player value. Game developers are beginning to consider how they might rebalance these economies to ensure they retain interest past an initial token airdrop or speculative frenzy. Without foundational shifts in token design, the short-term returns on future events might fail to be converted into long-term success.