At one point, I tried to start a separate website called Games on Blockchains.
It had its own domain, its own logo, its own email address, plans I made, and expectations I quietly carried.
And then… like many online projects, it simply stopped.
Not with a dramatic ending.
Not with a big failure.
It had its own domain, its own logo, its own email address, plans I made, and expectations I quietly carried.
And then… like many online projects, it simply stopped.
Not with a dramatic ending.
Not with a big failure.
Just with silence.
The files stayed in my Google Drive.
The files stayed in my Google Drive.
The logos stayed in forgotten folders.
The idea stayed unfinished.
Until now.
Instead of letting Games on Blockchains remain another abandoned corner of my digital past, I’ve decided to bring it home; into Coinstronauts.
Because in many ways, blockchain games were always part of the same story:
experimentation, optimism, curiosity, and the belief that technology could reshape how we play, earn, and interact.
This section of Coinstronauts is not here to promote tokens, promise profits, or revive hype. It exists to document:
Until now.
Instead of letting Games on Blockchains remain another abandoned corner of my digital past, I’ve decided to bring it home; into Coinstronauts.
Because in many ways, blockchain games were always part of the same story:
experimentation, optimism, curiosity, and the belief that technology could reshape how we play, earn, and interact.
This section of Coinstronauts is not here to promote tokens, promise profits, or revive hype. It exists to document:
- Blockchain games I explored
- Projects I followed
- Ideas that excited me
- Systems that failed
- And the strange intersection between gaming, ownership, and digital economies
Some will be critical.
Some will probably feel outdated in a few years.
And that’s the point.
This is not a marketing blog.
And that’s the point.
This is not a marketing blog.
It’s an archive.
A record of how blockchain gaming looked, felt, and promised itself to us during a very specific era of the internet.
The logos you see below were part of that original project. I’m keeping them not as branding, but as artefacts; reminders that at one time, this idea felt important enough to invest in.
A record of how blockchain gaming looked, felt, and promised itself to us during a very specific era of the internet.
The logos you see below were part of that original project. I’m keeping them not as branding, but as artefacts; reminders that at one time, this idea felt important enough to invest in.
Tags
Games on Blockchains

