Blockchain is the missing link for play.

Opinion by: Clean Lau, CEO of Zkcaandy
Many people still do not see the point of using blockchain in games. This is a powerful tool that drives ownership and trading but doesn’t matter for most gameplay types.
AI increase changes the equation. Blockchain is not just a bonus feature for games enhanced with artificial intelligence – it’s critical for developing a similar gameplay. Fast processors and cloud servers are no longer enough. AI agents and players need a blockchain to enable a real social gaming experience, where achievements can be recorded and brought to different titles, which become games in connected society ecosystems. Without decentralized infrastructure, the risks to the gameplay of the agent become a centralized wall garden where the development is temporary, the creations are locked, and the experience is limited.
Disposal creations
AI now can develop a personal game flow as it learns and adapts to real time. But when the AI runs within a centralized creature, its creations remain unavailable, owned and that is being -monetized by corporations.
Player contacts are stored privately on corporate servers. Memories and emerging character relationships die if the server is falling. The development of the game, the evolution of the AI agent and the formed content is tied to the lifecycle of a game session, account or corporate policy. If a player is restarting a game or a publisher is taking the plug, all of the creations and achievements are at risk. When AI agents forget what they did yesterday, emerging storylines could not open up always, and NPCs would not get smarter.
If the user holds at least part of the generated content, it can solve the problem, but the centralized nature of the games will not allow it.
Here’s another important thing: when AI fits the player, they become co-creating the game. They build new characters, stories and items, but players will not benefit from their own creations. Creativity can be exploited when players cannot achieve their contributions.
Memory, ownership and monetization
Blockchain is a natural fit to expand the AI memory and give the use of users of their creations.
A shared ledger can record the contents of the onchain game, including the actions and achievements of the player. Most AI agents are now operating within a single session: they do not remember previous contacts once the session ends. If the game’s development records are in the blockchain, nothing will be lost. Agents can learn and change from session to session. It opens the way to the character’s narratives and arches.
When the AI development is recorded on the onchain, it is stored in users’ purses, so players own and control their history -it has never been lost or locked. In addition to the benefits of memory for the AI agent, ownership opens extensive opportunities for managing in-game assets.
The problem with traditional games is the rent of the players, not ownership, things – everything remains under the control of the game publisher. If a player spends years shaping an AI companion or a unique item, that asset dies within that game. This cannot be transferred to other games or platforms. It is trapped.
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When AI is supported by the blockchain, any generated item can be mininted as an NFT and stay in the player’s purse forever. No one will delete or tighten the user’s access to it: NFTs are stored in a decentralized way. And this is for their care and utility, not speculation.
Users can move their genitals beyond a single title throughout the virtual world. When the blockchain maintains memory and habits, the items and even the NPCs carry a consistent identity wherever they go.
The games have become a single social ecosystem. Players can compare what they have built, show off their accomplishments to AI, and appreciate the travels of others. Social dynamic emerging around proven creativity, history and shared experiences, not just leaderboards or loot boxes. It keeps players back – not only playing, but connecting.
Is it expensive to store too much onchain data, though? Layer-2 and Layer-3 platforms have been noticeably advanced over the past few years. They became fast and inexpensive enough Administer thousands of transactions per second at almost invisible costs. Stable infrastructure made it possible to store large amounts of data. Blockchains now easily handle AI data accumulation for many users as needed.
Finally, asset ownership opens up to monetization opportunities. When made carefully, they enhance the gameplay, not replace it, as in early play-to-earn products.
AI agents will provide unique items and mint them as NFT, which provides an increase in in-game marketplaces woven directly to the gameplay. Agents will look for the best trading and autonomously carry them out. Players enjoy playing, skip most of technical disputes. They invest their time, creativity and skills in how they shape assets, characters or storylines with AI. And when they can lighten, rent or sell them in open markets, they get a real agency and reward feel, making their contributions to long -term value.
While players have been able to monheetize what they have created, game developers earn too. They can earn a portion of each market transaction, charge fees for mining or customization, and offer premium AI premium tools to creators. This method is beyond one-and-finished sales: Dev earns as players who create, trade and grow.
Embracing public ledgers is a widespread trend: big businesses and banks are increasingly relying on decentralized infrastructure. Blockchain plays a role in playing for many years, but it’s not just a good add-on. It is critical to support the entertainment of the AI-driven agent through memory, ownership and monetization to make it a real social experience. Without the web3, the next Gen Games would be at risk of just staying a version of the demo what they really could.
Opinion by: To you, CEO of Zkcaandy.
This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be done as legal or investment advice. The views, attitudes, and opinions expressed here are unique and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of the cointelegraph.