4.8 • 689 Ratings
🗓️ 4 September 2021
⏱️ 44 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Has decentralized gaming just created virtual menial labor?
Join hosts Adam B. Levine, Jonathan Mohan and Andreas M. Antonopoulos as they dive into the world of Axie Infinity and the growing global meta economy. Axie Infinity, a Pokémon-esc play-to-earn game on the Ethereum blockchain, has exploded in popularity around the world. The primary user-base has remained grounded in the Philippines as Filipinos from all walks of life buy, borrow, breed, trade and fight in-game NFT characters called “Axies.”
These fighting cartoon pets have earned players legitimate money – in some cases, enough to sway workers to quit their jobs to pursue Axie full-time. The pandemic and subsequent lockdowns, especially in places like the Philippines, only make Axie that much more enticing. Individuals and groups with more capital have also snapped on the Axie opportunity in the forms of “scholarships” and lending schemes.
Axie Infinity, and in particular, the lending schemes, prompt a larger conversation about the ethical implications of exporting work and the geographic inequality of opportunities. In the best light, lending within play-to-earn can be seen as providing opportunities with profits orders of magnitudes higher than the local economies could provide. Yet, viewing the practice from a different angle, it can be seen as richer countries farming out low-paying work to individuals who have no better options locally.
Is Axie Infinity a solution or scam? Will the platform maintain its relevance or fizzle out?
See also: Some Filipino Merchants Prefer Payment in Axie’s SLP
This episode featured Adam B. Levine, Andreas M. Antonopoulos and Jonathan Mohan. It was edited by Jonas, our theme song comes courtesy of Jared Rubens and today's music during the break was Delta by Gurty Beats. Today's album art features a photo by Karen Fedida/Unsplash, modified by Speaking of Bitcoin.
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0:00.0 | Ironically, I think this is essentially the entire plot of Ready Player 1. |
0:07.0 | And we're beginning to see this emerge in real life. |
0:14.0 | One of the most compelling things about blockchains is that their inherent neutrals |
0:18.0 | cuts through the limitations of our everyday reality, |
0:21.1 | enabling things that would be impossible without it to happen with a level of ease that's |
0:24.7 | sometimes hard to fathom. |
0:26.5 | That's certainly true of projects like Bitcoin, but there is another newer movement that's |
0:30.8 | using these same dynamics to, depending on who you ask, help uplift people looking to better |
0:35.5 | their situation around the world in ways that can't be provided by their local economies, or on the other hand, and through a darker lens, |
0:42.4 | it represents a fluffy form of modern slavery. I'm referring to Play to Earn, and on this episode, |
0:48.3 | we're going to talk about it. Hey folks, I'm Adam B Levine, and this is speaking of Bitcoin. |
0:53.8 | On today's show, we're talking Axi Infinity and the phenomenon of scholars, mostly based |
0:57.6 | in the Philippines, who are playing a Pokemon-like game as a sort of career. |
1:01.4 | To do that, as always, I'm joined by the other host of the show, Andreas M. Antonopoulos. |
1:05.7 | Hello. |
1:06.7 | And Jonathan Mahi. |
1:08.3 | Hey, hey. Stephanie's out this week. |
1:13.6 | So, folks, we have a lot of ground to cover here. |
1:14.8 | We were just talking before the show. |
1:17.2 | Neither of you have been paying any attention to this thing. And I have, as usual, just dived in, absolutely neck deep. |
1:21.4 | So I read an article maybe about a month ago at this point that was talking about this |
1:26.0 | play-to-earn movement. And play-to-earn |
... |
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