A lot of Web3 games say “community owned”… but when you look closer, the community rarely decides anything meaningful.
That’s why I’m watching what’s happening around @Pixels
Instead of throwing a DAO out on day one just for marketing, the team is slowly opening real levers of the game economy tuning, rewards, and ecosystem funding.
If holders eventually help steer those decisions, that’s when a token stops being decoration and starts becoming influence.
Web3 governance only matters when power actually moves.
