Ubisoft quietly launches blockchain RPG with playable NFTs priced up to $63K

Screenshot from the official Champions Tactics: Grimoria Chronicles launch trailer.
Screenshot from the official Champions Tactics: Grimoria Chronicles launch trailer. (Image credit: Ubisoft)

In a move that seems to reflect an ever-greedier gaming industry insistent on selling us things no one asked for, Ubisoft has finally stealth-launched its first-ever PvP blockchain RPG title, Champions Tactics: Grimoria Chronicles — complete with playable-characters-as-NFTs, purchasable through in-game currency or cryptocurrency, as spotted by IGN.

What's notable here is the pricing scheme: the most expensive character at launch is Inquisitor Swift Zealot, which will cost a whopping $63,372.19 USD, converted from crypto. Other Champions (a total of 2732) are also available, with just one other costing tens of thousands ($25.1K for Glowing Beast) and the rest costing $5,000 or less. You can confirm these prices and more on the game's official Marketplace page.

Champions Tactics - Launch Trailer - YouTube Champions Tactics - Launch Trailer - YouTube
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Are you willing to spend (literal) thousands of dollars to flex in a video game? Ubisoft seems intent on finding out — though, to its credit, it's not like any of these multi-thousand-dollar NFTs have production costs even remotely close to what the end users are being expected to pay. The Free-To-Play prospect seems particularly bleak, considering the gameplay stat boosts that premium players and their premium characters will be enjoying, in this competitive PvP-only game.

That said, people do spend thousands of dollars on in-game items in other Free-To-Play games, such as Counter-Strike 2 — though, unlike "Champions Tactics", Counter-Strike 2 does not involve pay-to-win mechanics and wisely restricts these financial aspects to cosmetics. If "virtual items that cost real money" sound like NFTs to you, you aren't incorrect — it's just that AAA and AA games have been doing this without the blockchain for over a decade.

A similar scheme with NFTs may have been more palatable to the larger gaming audience, but NFTs with overinflated pricing epitomizing the concept of "pay to win" is unlikely to bring over players from games such as Marvel Snap or Hearthstone, which offer similar F2P PvP RPG gameplay without having the audacity price playable characters at $63K.

Maybe Ubisoft realizes this — it was a quiet launch, after all — and is simply hoping that a few true NFT believers will participate anyway. It most likely started development before the 95% loss of NFT market value last year, but still declared this game as part of its NFT initiative back in July.

Aside from this game, a number of other blockchain/web3 games built around NFTs do exist, and they do have a decent amount of variety in genre. A live tally of the top 50 earners is even kept at PlayToEarn.com. The general business model is similar, however, and unless you're a true NFT devotee there's not much reason to engage with these titles compared to traditional F2P games.

While those F2P games have business models that often resemble gambling (including Counter-Strike 2, where you buy keys to open crates that give items of highly variable monetary value — usually none, but sometimes thousands), they do at least have a more sizeable audience and often more room for profit.

Christopher Harper
Contributing Writer

Christopher Harper has been a successful freelance tech writer specializing in PC hardware and gaming since 2015, and ghostwrote for various B2B clients in High School before that. Outside of work, Christopher is best known to friends and rivals as an active competitive player in various eSports (particularly fighting games and arena shooters) and a purveyor of music ranging from Jimi Hendrix to Killer Mike to the Sonic Adventure 2 soundtrack.

  • hotaru251
    Anyone who pays for this stuff should be banned from spending $ on any game.

    it takes a special kind of person to actively say "im dumb and love being con'd"
    Reply
  • Dementoss
    Well, they can only charge what players are prepared to pay, more fool them if the do pay.

    I agree on the "special kind of person" sentiment.
    Reply
  • salgado18
    I believe that what NFT brings to the table is uniqueness of items. Probably thereare only a handful of those 60k characters to be bought, so in a world of a million players, three would pay the price of exclusivity. Well, if it gets to one million players, obviously. Still, all that could be done the traditional way, I think ther's nothing that an NFT brings to the table that can't be done with a database.
    Reply
  • Notton
    Does noobisoft have any whale fans leftover that they can milk?
    Reply
  • Sleepy_Hollowed
    salgado18 said:
    I believe that what NFT brings to the table is uniqueness of items. Probably thereare only a handful of those 60k characters to be bought, so in a world of a million players, three would pay the price of exclusivity. Well, if it gets to one million players, obviously. Still, all that could be done the traditional way, I think ther's nothing that an NFT brings to the table that can't be done with a database.
    NFTs are just a receipt, so this is the dumbest take ever, don’t hand anything to dumb “tech”.

    They can do the same via server-side unique items matched to a user account upon purchase, and the receipt can be done on cheaper technology both to them and the planet.
    Reply
  • rad666
    Asinine blockchain BS aside, the name sounds like it came out of a boardroom using a buzzword generator...

    ...probably because it did.
    Reply
  • Kamen Rider Blade
    Just waiting for this Dumpster Fire to burn Ubisoft.
    Reply
  • why_wolf
    salgado18 said:
    I believe that what NFT brings to the table is uniqueness of items. Probably thereare only a handful of those 60k characters to be bought, so in a world of a million players, three would pay the price of exclusivity. Well, if it gets to one million players, obviously. Still, all that could be done the traditional way, I think ther's nothing that an NFT brings to the table that can't be done with a database.
    NFTs a are literally just a link to a database. Just with a bunch of cryptography that make them insanely inefficient compared to a normal database.
    Reply
  • JTWrenn
    Everyone who has ever spent on in game anything contributed to this coming about. If you buy it....corporations will come!
    Reply
  • Amdlova
    Ubisoft is close to death. talking with my friends no one got one single game from ubisoft in years...
    Last ubisoft title I have played is farcry 4. Almost ten years back
    Reply