That may sound like a fairly standard setup for tradable card games like Magic: The Gathering or Yu-Gi-Oh! With SkyWeaver, Sanders said players will also own the game’s digital cards, similar to how Magic and Yu-Gi-Oh! players find value in owning physical cards. Think about it like this: Hearthstone—a collectible card game made by World of Warcraft and Overwatch developer Blizzard—has a massive player base that still spends millions of dollars a year on cards to use in the popular game. But players are simply paying for the license to use specific digital cards. They don’t actually own them and are not entitled to the inherent worth of each card.
“[W]ith SkyWeaver, each card is secured and registered on the ethereum blockchain,” Sanders said. That means each card will have a unique and real value on the cryptocurrency’s ongoing ledger. Each card will have a value in ethereum, which means it will have a value in real dollars.
“We call this ‘true digital ownership,’” Sanders explained, “where people have the true rights and privileges of ownership, just like when you own a physical object like a motorcycle. In SkyWeaver, you can put a new card in your deck and play against other players or sell it on the shop.”
SkyWeaver, as Horizon envisions it, will have its own store that will act as a peer-to-peer decentralized exchange. It will be tied to your ethereum wallet and accessible by the Arcadeum platform. Players can trade the cards, gift them, sell them for cryptocurrency or keep them in the digital wallet for future use. The economic model is still being designed, but Sanders said SkyWeaver will be a free-to-play game. Horizon plans to sell cards in the store as well as implement transaction fees.
SkyWeaver is in alpha mode with a closed beta planned for April or May and a launch tentatively set for sometime this year. But Horizon is wasting no time in planning for the future.
“I see such tremendous potential in blockchain tech to liberate us from archaic economy models,” Sanders said. He was already in the cryptocurrency space, but when Horizon’s founder Peter Kieltyka told him about the idea of blockchain-based gaming, Sanders said he thought, “Holy shit, this is it.”
He wasn’t the only one to think that. Horizon has already found a good amount of funding from reputable investors. Investment has been led by the venture capital firm Initialized Capital, which was started by Reddit cofounder Alexis Ohanian and Garry Tan. Additionally, Horizon has received funding from the popular cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase.
It doesn’t seem like the plunge in the price of cryptocurrencies over the past year has done much to stymie investor interest in a product like the one Horizon is developing, nor has it dampened the spirits of the team. Just over a year ago, one ethereum was valued at more than $1,300; currently, it’s valued at $136.47. Ethereum’s price changes daily, with the value fluctuating like the stock market, but Sanders said the current price hasn’t made Horizon pause in the slightest.
“No one on our team talks about the price of ethereum,” he said. “The price is so seldom spoken about because I think it’s akin to the dot-com bubble. A lot of shitty companies got shaken out by bad practices. We didn’t do an Initial Coin Offering [a crypto-based funding practice similar to a stock market IPO], so we haven’t been exposed.”