ACE—considered rare in the blockchain gaming scene—actually has a playable game.
Fusionist, a mecha combat game, has officially launched on Steam and the Epic store. The visuals are on par with 3A-quality titles. In an ocean of chain games still stuck in “the game is still in development,” this is already pretty uncommon—most peers can’t even put out a working demo. ACE is the coin of that chain, Endurance. It’s used both as gas and as in-game currency, and there’s also a mechanism that burns the coin once every two weeks. Back then, it was a Binance Launchpool project—pedigree isn’t bad.
The game is a real game—this part has to be acknowledged.
Then the coin—priced at $0.07—fell from its peak until only a fraction remained, with a market cap around $7 million.
The problem is still the same two old issues. First, the unlock schedule drags on and on: a multi-year release plan keeps getting pushed out to 2027, with new coins coming out every so often, and the amount being burned simply can’t outweigh the sell-side pressure. Second, the people who play the game and the people who buy the coin are just not the same group. Players come to play mechs, not to hold tokens. No matter how good the game is, it doesn’t automatically mean people will buy ACE.
It has a game, it has visuals, it has exchange support—compared to those without games, it’s stronger. But on the coin-price chart, the connection still never really got made.
#ACE $ACE