
What Is AML And Why Is It Relevant To Token Economies?
AML (Anti-Money Laundering) refers to practices that prevent illicit finance. Token economies that touch real money may need AML controls. …
A 50-item FAQ for virtual coins, game economies, and education-first Web3 concepts.

AML (Anti-Money Laundering) refers to practices that prevent illicit finance. Token economies that touch real money may need AML controls. …

Marketplaces are places where players trade items or currency-official shops, auction houses, or third-party sites. Official marketplaces …

Liquidity is how easily you can buy or sell without moving the price too much. In virtual economies, high liquidity means items trade …

UGC (user-generated content) lets players build maps, quests, skins, or experiences. Coin economies can reward creators or let players spend …

Solana is often associated with higher throughput and lower fees, which can make on-chain interactions feel more game-friendly. But speed …

Wallet UX is how the game shows balances, transactions, and spending options. Great UX prevents mistakes with confirmations, clear labels, …

Web3 games often claim player ownership, open marketplaces, or on-chain verification. In practice, the experience varies wildly. The best …

Daily quests give small, predictable goals; streak rewards reward consistent play over time. Together they build a gentle Coins Farm habit. …

Most in-game coins are not cash, so “profit” usually comes from adjacent, allowed activities: streaming, esports, tutorials, …

V-Bucks are Fortnite’s premium currency used for cosmetics, emotes, and Battle Pass-related purchases. The key economy idea is …