NFT cockfighting game canned, but will buy back your cocks

How could such a visionary idea have failed?

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.

AnNFT-based cockfighting game that’s been in development for a year has been unceremoniously canned (thanks, Kotaku). Or in the words of its developers Irreverent Labs, entered “indefinite hibernation”. The game would have starred ‘mechabots’: Robotic chickens that were being sold as NFTs to verify each chicken’s uniqueness. It was intended as a so-called “play-to-earn” game where players would level the chickens and theoretically sell them on at a higher price. I’m not making this up.

This hype video showsthe production values weren’t too bad, though as soon as the fighting starts it’s pretty clear this wouldn’t have been a good game. But then the game’s cancellation is probably the least bizarre thing about this whole story. The studio behind the game hasone of the most irritating websites I’ve ever usedand has pivoted away from NFTs onto a new area of focus: AI. That may seem like swapping one grift for another, but it’s even more astonishing in the light of the factit raised $40 million in private funding to make MechaFightClub, disclosed in an SEC filing.

At least some of the cash still remains. The one silver lining for fans of MechaFightClub (presuming there are any) is that Irrereverent Labs announced the cancellation alongside a buyback program called, and again I’m not making this up, Sol 4 Cocks.

It’s time for Sol 4 Cocks: we’re repurchasing your Mechabots and putting MFC into indefinite hibernation. This was a tough decision. For more details, visit our official announcement here: https://t.co/TPfb1VP2C7 pic.twitter.com/6YnO4g50T4May 11, 2023

Sol refers to the popularcryptocurrencySolana, which is currently trading at around $21 per unit. So the buyback offer values each robot chicken at $378. Look, I just work here.

Irreverent Labs' official statement on what’s happened reads asequal parts misleading and delusional. It also says absolutely everything about this corner of the industry that the first two pages (of four) are dedicated to the risk of scams around Sol 4 Cocks, before going on to moan about those pesky regulators and how they made the NFT cockfighting dream impossible.

“The theme, culture, art, story and underpinning goals of MFC remain with us, but we can’t continue to develop it as a blockchain game,” says Irreverent Labs. “Unfortunately, the regulatory and operations environment around blockchain within the USA has drastically changed in the last two years.

“We are an American company, and a lack of clarity is making it difficult for blockchain companies to operate here. In the current regulatory confusion, we simply couldn’t create an in-game economy without concern about the regulatory ramifications. We have no way to know how long this will continue, or when it will get better. We simply can’t ask you to wait any longer.”

The biggest gaming news, reviews and hardware deals

The biggest gaming news, reviews and hardware deals

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

It’s not that the bottom is falling out of the crypto market or people have completely lost whatever confidence there ever was in NFTs, then. It’s the government! It does make you wonder where that $40 million came from, and how much more money is sloshing around in lunatic projects like this: Probably more than one would like to imagine. At least, in this case, it didn’t end up in a total rug-pull.

Rich is a games journalist with 15 years' experience, beginning his career on Edge magazine before working for a wide range of outlets, including Ars Technica, Eurogamer, GamesRadar+, Gamespot, the Guardian, IGN, the New Statesman, Polygon, and Vice. He was the editor of Kotaku UK, the UK arm of Kotaku, for three years before joining PC Gamer. He is the author of a Brief History of Video Games, a full history of the medium, which the Midwest Book Review described as “[a] must-read for serious minded game historians and curious video game connoisseurs alike.”

After closing its AAA games development studio, Netflix Games VP transforms into the VP of GenAI for Games and the gobbledygook must flow: ‘a creator-first vision… with AI being a catalyst and an accelerant’

Roblox is banning kids from unrated experiences and Social Hangout spaces in an effort to protect them from paedophiles

I desperately hope Dragon Age: The Veilguard, Baldur’s Gate 3 and Disco Elysium inspire more RPG devs to reject the traditional drip, drip, drip of DLC and expansions