By Reza Jafery and Andrew Hayward
4 min read
W-Coin is a Telegram-based tap-to-earn game that has been on the horizon for several months now. It sets itself apart from its competitors with a couple variations from the standard tap-to-earn model, which anyone paying attention to the Telegram gaming ecosystem has become very familiar with over the course of this year.
According to the W-Coin community channel on Telegram, the game has amassed 37 million users to date, and is finally gearing up to launch its token on The Open Network (TON) alongside an airdrop to eligible players. Here's what you need to know.
W-Coin uses the same basic mechanics as other tap-to-earn games, as you tap the screen to make your in-game coin stash grow, plus there are various power-ups and persistent upgrades you can unlock to boost your earnings.
However, the game does bring some added twists. With W-Coin, the players got to collectively decide which blockchain the token will be launched on, ultimately voting for TON over Ethereum or Solana. TON is the chain used by most Telergram games, including Notcoin, Hamster Kombat, and Catizen.
Screenshots from W-Coin. Image: Decrypt
W-Coin also differentiates itself from the competition with the addition of staking. Players can stake their earned W-Coin to earn additional rewards. To stake tokens, players specify how long they want to lock up their tokens: three, seven, or 14 days, with varying yield rewards ranging from 2% to 20% depending on the chosen period.
At the end of the staking period, your rewards are automatically added to your coin balance. You can choose to stake only a portion of your in-game coins, or all of them—but make sure to leave enough to pay for boosters!
Similarly to Notcoin, Hamster Kombat, and TapSwap, you’ll start the game within the Telegram app on iOS or Android by starting a conversation with the W-Coin bot. Once the game is booted up, players are greeted with the oh-so-familiar coin in the center of the screen, ready to be tapped.
You have a finite energy bar that decreases as you tap the coin, and each tap of the coin earns you 1 W-Coin at a time—at least until you get some upgrades. There are two types of free daily boosters that players can use to optimize their daily earnings: Full-Battery, and Lucky Dice.
Full-Battery recharges your energy bar, so you can keep tapping after you’ve used up all your juice, while Lucky Dice rolls a dice that generates a number between 1 and 20. Whatever number you roll is a multiplier that is applied to your earnings for 10 seconds, plus your energy bar doesn’t deplete during that period. You get three free daily uses of each boost, so don’t let them go to waste.
Players can also purchase upgrades, which differ from boosters in that they’re applied to your game permanently and aren’t temporary perks. The upgrades available in W-Coin are: Tap, Maximizer, Charger, W-orker, and Multiplier.
Screenshots from W-Coin. Image: Decrypt
The first four upgrades are similar to those found in other tap-to-earn games. Tap increases the amount of coins you earn per tap, Maximizer increases your total energy limit, Charger increases the speed at which your energy bar replenishes, and W-orker is an auto-tap bot that continues to earn you coins when you’re not in the app.
The last upgrade, Multiplier, is a new addition to the tap-to-earn meta. Using the multiplier upgrade gives you a chance to randomly hit a multiplier of up to 100x points per tap, though it’s a pricey upgrade to invest in.
W-Coin's developers have finally shared that the WCOIN token is set to launch in December on TON. The tap-to-earn game took a snapshot of player activity ahead of the planned token launch and airdrop, but is still letting players earn more towards the airdrop in the meantime.
“The snapshot is here to ensure fair airdrop distribution based on true engagement, not just early access or balances,” the Telegram post said. “This is a big step toward the December listing, designed to reward real activity and set us apart from the rest.”
W-Coin said that it will give 70% of the token supply out in the airdrop, with the remaining balance saved for project growth, marketing, exchange listing costs, and more.
Edited by Andrew Hayward
Editor's note: This story was originally published on July 1, 2024 and last updated with new details on November 4.
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