Quick Take
- Unioverse shutters less than a year after its token launch, citing market and tech disruption
- Mighty Action Heroes goes offline July 22 as GOAT Gaming pivots fully to Telegram
- Developers will keep assets on-chain, but gameplay and development are ending
Two more Web3 games went offline this week, continuing a trend that has defined crypto gaming in 2025. Unioverse, once pitched as a blueprint for interoperability, has gone dark after failing to secure further funding. Mighty Action Heroes, an early real-time multiplayer title, will be sunset later this month as its creators focus on AI-powered Telegram games.
Unioverse Shuts Down After Token Launch and Listings
Unioverse went public in September 2024 with a multi-platform token launch and plans to build a shared universe of Web3 games. The team raised $750,000 in an oversubscribed TGE that drew $1.3 million in pledges, and listed its $UNIO token on Gate, Kucoin, Bitget, and other exchanges. Less than ten months later, the project is out of funds and offline.
Founder Wyeth Ridgway told the community that the team had spent six months trying to keep the project alive. “The landscape of crypto and games has shifted significantly,” he wrote. “It’s impossible to ignore the fact that AI is fundamentally changing how content will be made.”

Investors and longtime followers argued that Unioverse over-prioritized rewards for playtesters, instead of using its limited funds to secure game development or investor confidence. The focus on playable demos like Hoverdrome and Proving Grounds was seen by some as surface-level distraction.
“The way you guys handled the token launch was disgraceful… using people for liquidity to pay gamers,” one user wrote in the community Discord.
There are currently no plans to revive the servers, but Ridgway said the team will try to find a path for the IP to continue elsewhere. A post-mortem is in development.
Mighty Action Heroes Ends Live Support
GOAT Gaming, which previously raised $10M in 2022, confirmed this week that Mighty Action Heroes will shut down July 22. The studio is shifting its full attention to GOAT Gaming, its Telegram-native platform, which now serves over 6 million users.
In a blog post, the team said it had explored porting Mighty Action Heroes to Telegram, but technical limitations around latency and multiplayer support made it unfeasible. Rather than “deliver a compromised experience,” the game is being sunset completely.
Collectible NFTs such as Heroes, Grenades, and Supply Crates can still be exported until shutdown. These items will remain on-chain. Any starter assets will not be transferable.
The studio says it remains open to using Mighty Action Heroes trophies and items in future projects but made no firm commitments.
Part of a Larger Trend
The shutdowns come as part of a larger wave of closures that has already taken down high-profile Web3 titles this year. Nyan Heroes, Ember Sword, and Walking Dead: Empires were also discontinued. All three had live tokens, NFT collections, and active communities, yet failed to maintain user growth or secure new capital.
Unioverse and Mighty Action Heroes both showed early momentum but ended with the same outcome: on-chain assets, no active game.