Pudgy Penguins launches its 'Club Penguin' moment, and the game doesn't feel like crypto at all
Pudgy World went live with 12 towns, plot-based quests, and mini-games in what the team calls "one of the most technically advanced browser-based games ever created." The PENGU token jumped 9% on the news.
By Shaurya Malwa|Edited by Sam ReynoldsUpdated Mar 10, 2026, 6:57 a.m. Published Mar 10, 2026, 6:20 a.m.
Make us preferred on Google
What to know:
- Pudgy Penguins has launched Pudgy World, a browser-based game that plays like a conventional title and largely hides its crypto elements from users.
- The game emphasizes smooth, intuitive gameplay first and connects to the PENGU token and NFT economy second, a deliberate shift from earlier crypto games that felt like financial products.
- Following the launch, the PENGU token rose about 9% and Pudgy Penguin NFT dollar floors increased, as the project tests a strategy of building brand and audience before layering in gaming and tokens.
Pudgy Penguins shipped its flagship game to the general public on Monday, and the most notable thing about it is that you wouldn't know it had anything to do with crypto unless someone told you.
Pudgy World, the browser-based game first announced at Art Basel in late 2023, went live with 12 unique towns across a world called The Berg, narrative quests where players help a penguin named Pengu find someone named Polly, and a set of mini-games.
CoinDesk played a 10-minute session and came away with a simple takeaway. It's smooth, responsive, intuitive, and clearly not built with a crypto-first user in mind.
"We created custom world-building tools using open-source web technology, giving us a lightweight editor built for speed and rapid iteration," co-founder @chefgoyardi said in an X post. "Our asset pipeline lets artists work in Maya, Cinema4D, or Blender while custom Houdini scripts automatically convert everything into a web-optimized format. Creative freedom without compromise."
"We engineered physics specifically for the browser. Snappy movement, parkour, fluid navigation, and high frame rates even on lower-end devices," they added.
The game could be pure Club Penguin nostalgia for some users. The game was Disney's browser-based virtual world that ran from 2005 to 2017 and peaked at over 200 million registered users, mostly kids who customized penguin avatars and played mini-games.
It remains the template for what a mass-market penguin game looks like, and the comparison Pudgy World could be measured against in the broader audience.

The NFT gaming space has spent years producing products that feel like wallets with gameplay bolted on. Pudgy World goes the other direction, building something that works as a game first and connects to the token economy second.
Whether that translates to retention and revenue is a different question, but the UX approach is a deliberate break from the pattern.
The PENGU token responded, jumping 9% on the day. Pudgy Penguin NFT floor prices held flat in ETH terms, though ether itself was up 5%, meaning the dollar-denominated floor rose with it.

The broader context is that crypto gaming has mostly failed to produce anything people actually want to play. Projects that led with token incentives attracted mercenary farmers who left the moment monetary yields dried up.
Pudgy's bet is that building an audience through toys, memes, and brand affinity first, then giving that audience a game, works better than the other way around.
One game launch doesn't prove the thesis. But shipping a product that feels like a game rather than a DeFi dashboard is further than most NFT projects have gotten.
Pudgy PenguinsNFT gamingNon-Fungible TokensMore For You
Pudgy Penguins: Challenging the Pokemon and Disney Legacy in the Global IP Race
By CoinDesk ResearchFeb 27, 2026
Commissioned byPudgy Penguins
CoinDesk Research looks into how Pudgy Penguins disrupts traditional toys market via a phygital model. With 2M+ units sold, they scale via global partnerships and events.
What to know:
- Disrupting a Stagnant Market: Pudgy Penguins is utilizing a "Negative CAC" model to challenge the traditional $31.7B licensed toy industry by treating physical merchandise as a profitable user acquisition tool rather than just a final product.
More For You
Ethereum Foundation wants the network to be the trust layer for AI
By Margaux Nijkerk|Edited by Stephen AlpherMar 4, 2026
Davide Crapis, the foundation's AI lead, sees the network acting as a coordination and verification layer in an increasingly AI-mediated world.
What to know:
- As artificial intelligence reshapes everything from finance to cybersecurity, the Ethereum Foundation (EF) is carving out a strategy for how the world’s second-largest blockchain fits into that future.
- Instead of trying to fuse blockchains and AI at the level of raw computation, the EF sees the network playing a different role: acting as a coordination and verification layer in an increasingly AI-mediated world.
- Davide Crapis, the AI lead at the EF, argues that the motivation is as philosophical as it is technical.

Here's how traders and big buyers stepped in to keep bitcoin steady during the oil shock
46 minutes ago
AI tokens rally after Nvidia open-source agent plan, beat CoinDesk 20
1 hour ago
Bhutan sells $42.5 Million of bitcoin in 2026 as national stack drops 58% from peak
1 hour ago
Ether, solana, XRP jump higher as Trump signals Iran war nearing end
2 hours ago
Bitcoin jumps past $70,000 as war volatility fades
3 hours ago
Trump's threat to block Congress over voter-ID law leaves crypto bill on shakier ground
6 hours agoTop Stories
Crypto and stocks add to gains as Trump says Iran war could be over soon
11 hours ago
Bitcoin could be the big winner if the U.S.-Iran conflict drags on for months
14 hours ago