There’s even a whole roadmap for how this studio is aiming to integrate these blockchain systems well into next year. If you got more of one than the other you can also convert them in the cube. You just get them by playing, rifts / bounties are the best. As of October, the studio began pushing the public sale of what it’s calling Gelixier Coin, which is used throughout the title. I recommend never upgrading yellows unless you have to, trying to gear up all classes and upgrading will drain your materials fast. Apparently, Studio8 has relaunched the game as a blockchain game, now, calling it Astel of Atra, “a global NFT game in genre of MMORPG.” According to the Twitter chronology, the company opened its doors last spring with a presale of “an attractive Astel” NFT, then spent all summer demoing Astels. ![]() I was reminded of all this today thanks to a PR missive in my inbox from Studio8, the blockchain company that picked up the title and was holding the bag when the sunsets became inevitable. ![]() The whole conglomeration of titles has long since sunsetted, and the only reason it’s not the go-to poster child for “temports” is that it’s overshadowed by the better-known Bless franchise, which made identical blunders in a much more high-profile way. It quickly sunsetted in its native country, rushed to Steam (which didn’t save it), got offloaded to a blockchain company, and tried a battle royale spinoff (which also didn’t go anywhere). I’m sure you folks all remember Astellia Online: It was a South Korean import that launched here in 2019 we called it a “ solidly average MMO,” but of course, that’s seldom enough for success in this genre.
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