
After a turbulent period in previous cycles, 2025 saw a massive drop in funding for GameFi projects, forcing many studios to close their doors as incentives dried up.
Summary
- GameFi’s funding fell 55% year-over-year in 2025 as weak token models and poor retention wiped out studios.
- Gaming tokens have underperformed crypto overall, with a lot of decline 80%+ recent highs
- Web2.5 games using blockchain discreetly, often without tokens, are gaining ground
GameFi’s funding collapse in 2025 exposed flawed token models, while a quieter shift toward revenue-driven Web2.5 gaming began to take shape.
According to the latest report from Delphi Digital, venture capital funding fell more than 55% year-over-year, reflecting the broader crypto downturn but hitting gaming harder than most industries.
GameFi funding crash reveals structural cracks
After raising more than $147 million in the first quarter, funding slipped to $73 million in the second quarter, briefly rebounded to $129 million in the third quarter, then dried up almost entirely by the end of the year. The consequences were serious. Dozens of studios ran out of runway as token prices collapsed and treasuries were drained.
Data from CoinGecko shows that the total market cap of the gaming sector is approaching $6.1 billion, with many tokens down 70-95% from all-time highs. GALA fell 82% year-over-year, Axie Infinity fell 86%, and Enjin fell 87%.
Poor retention aggravated the damage. Many titles saw 60% player declines in 30 days, while inflationary play-to-earn models rewarded bots and extractive behavior rather than real players.
In the second quarter alone, more than 300 gaming dApps were shut down and DappRadar, an analytics platform, said it would shut down after seven years.
Web2.5 games gain traction as tokens lose relevance
The situation is not completely disastrous. As speculative GameFi has faded, Web2.5 games have gradually gained popularity. These studios use blockchain as infrastructure rather than a selling point, forgoing tokens altogether in favor of revenue.
Teams like Fumb Games, Mythical Games, and Wemade/Wemix continue to generate significant revenue using blockchain to improve margins, increase engagement, or add new payment rails. Stablecoin adoption accelerates this change, facilitating the deployment of nanotransactions, global payments and reward systems without imposing speculation on players.
Even traditional brands are experimenting carefully. FIFA ditched Algorand (ALGO) and introduced FIFA Rivals, a mobile and blockchain game powered by Avalanche (AVAX), attracting partners like Adidas into the ecosystem.
Although native Web3 games still generate profits in the six to seven figures, their user bases are small and driven by incentives. As rewards decrease, their ecosystems often see decreasing engagement.
Industry voices are now describing 2025 as a necessary reset after the 2021-2022 hype cycle, when billions poured in with little lasting value. The recovery of tokens like GALA, AXS, and ENJ depends less on speculation and more on whether the games finally deliver the products people want to play.


