Quick Take
- HYTOPIA has surpassed 143,000 users and 1.9 million minutes of playtime since launch
 - The platform now averages 5,000 daily sessions with 150% user growth in September
 - Veteran Roblox developers join the Creator Fund to build new multiplayer titles
 
It has been seven months since HYTOPIA opened its developer tools to the public. What started as an experiment in browser-based creation has grown into one of the most active new hubs in Web3 gaming. The platform now counts more than 143,000 registered users, 1.93 million minutes of playtime, and over 245,000 visits from 177 countries. September alone saw user growth climb by 150 percent, with roughly 5,000 daily game sessions recorded across the platform.
HYTOPIA’s concept is simple. Anyone can create and publish a game directly from the browser using TypeScript or JavaScript. There are no downloads, no engine installations, and no barriers to entry. Players click a link and enter instantly. Developers use a web-based world editor, upload assets, and test changes in real time.
Built on Coinbase’s Base network, the system gives creators full ownership of their digital items. Marketplace earnings flow directly onchain, and creators receive a higher share of marketplace fees than on Roblox, along with 5 percent royalties each time one of their items is resold by players.
HYTOPIA’s model has caught the attention of both small developers and larger studios looking for more control over their work. Its Creator Fund, which started at $125,000, doubled to $250,000 in September after applications outpaced initial expectations. The fund offers up to $25,000 per studio plus engineering and marketing support.

Among those joining the program are studios with deep experience in online games. Retro Shrimp, a veteran Roblox team responsible for some of the platform’s biggest multiplayer hits, is developing a new game called Hyper Ball Arena on HYTOPIA. The studio’s past projects include Skate Park, DOG, and Ronald, each with hundreds of millions of plays. Their decision to build on HYTOPIA signals confidence in its web-first design and developer-friendly economics.
Another team, IROC Studios, known for Game Store Tycoon on Roblox, has also joined to create Pawtopia. Combined, these developers bring more than a billion cumulative plays from their earlier titles. HYTOPIA says their interest reflects a growing migration of experienced creators to its ecosystem.
While professional teams bring credibility, first-time developers have also shaped HYTOPIA’s growth. More than half of the platform’s early games were made by people who had never written code before. That accessibility has produced a mix of experimental and social projects that now fill its discovery pages.
Some of the standout titles include SkyGarden, an open-world farming sim that has drawn more than 38,000 plays since August, and Steal My Brainrot, a lighthearted social game with over 30,000 sessions. Other popular entries such as Cookie Clicker and Frontiers, an MMORPG built by HYTOPIA co-founder ArkDev, showcase how flexible the SDK has become for both simple and complex projects.
Discovery within the platform is rising alongside creation. HYTOPIA’s game list has passed 340,000 views, while its homepage has reached 157,000, reflecting increasing player exploration. Its playtime now totals nearly four years of combined in-game activity.
HYTOPIA’s technical foundation remains a key part of its appeal. Games run on server-authoritative infrastructure, meaning logic is handled securely rather than on player devices. Developers write their games once, and they function across web, desktop, and mobile without separate builds. Even user interfaces are built with familiar web languages like HTML and CSS.
Behind the growth figures, HYTOPIA’s story is one of accessible creation and ownership. A small team can build a playable multiplayer world in days, test it instantly, and start earning onchain without external marketplaces or lengthy approvals. That workflow has drawn attention from across the indie and Web3 development communities, many of whom see HYTOPIA as a sign of what browser gaming can become.
Seven months after its alpha release, HYTOPIA’s momentum is less about the numbers and more about the shift in how those numbers are made. Games are being shared through links instead of downloads, assets are owned by their creators, and the browser has quietly become a platform for full-scale multiplayer worlds.
HYTOPIA recently announced its new ecosystem token, $HYBUX, alongside migrating fully to Base, Coinbase’s Layer-2 network. The change triggered a relaunch of its onchain economy under the newly formed HY Foundation, which will manage governance and support continued platform growth.
 
 




