Why End-to-End
The videogame industry has proven, through the decades, that consoles were the easiest way to get people immersed into gaming. Dedicated systems take away all the guessing work: it's a system meant for gaming, it plays games. There isn't much else that players, regardless of their experience, had to know. That allowed companies to focus their attention on the games. Choosing a console over the other was merely a matter of preference in the exclusive games they had, and most often than not, the better marketing campaign would win.
This allowed for everybody to start gaming, regardless of age or technical knowledge. When it comes to GameFi, things are severely different. There's a plethora of tech that needs to be understood. At a bare minimum, knowing how to operate a web3 wallet, learning about gas, but most importantly, discovering games, and good games at that. Most often than not, this whole process actively discourages players or curious users, even when the game might be worth the work. That way, the GameFi space sorts of ingests and regurgitates traders and web3 enthusiasts that are there mostly for the financial aspects, rather than the entertainment ones. While that subset of users is extremely important in the web3 economy of GameFi, and should be cherished, it's undeniable that it's not enough to support a gaming project on the longterm, often left with tons of traders and enthusiasts, but no players. Following the same principles that made gaming accessible in the first place, VisionGame aims to pioneer a "console-like" approach in the space: one single ecosystem, one place to develop, play, find, support, trade, all that is GameFi. To that end, a full solution was required: LayerVision, a dedicated blockchain layer, VisionNexus, a dedicated community run Network, and a plethora of apps and products that make full use of both solutions. That, is VisionGame.
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