The next such event will occur on July 5th.
Additionally, every full moon, Ubisoft will release special-edition Rabbids. Their price currently ranges between 0.05 and 0.15 ETH. Rabbids can be purchased with Ethereum by linking a wallet to the site. The goal is to collect the POPOs and put together a complete collection on the site. However, even if you only own a certain creature for a few moments, you will receive a Proof of Plausible Ownership (POPO) certificate that states that you did own the Rabbid. In Rabbids Token, it is possible to lose ownership over your Rabbids as even already-owned skins can be purchased by another user and “stolen” from you and you won’t get any money in return.Įach Rabbid undergoes transformation once you “steal” it from another user, so you won’t know exactly which one you’re buying. Nevertheless, the game has an additional twist compared to crypto games pioneer CryptoKitties. In Ubisoft’s game, players can purchase various rabbit-like alien creatures from Ubisoft’s long-running game franchise using Ethereum. Rabbids Token launched on June 17th and is in many ways similar to the popular CryptoKitties, which are infamous for essentially crashing Ethereum when the game exploded in popularity in late 2017. The release comes after years of growing interest in blockchain gaming initiatives by the successful game studio.
This has led to both highs and lows for the franchise, but it always produces something unique between bigger entries. Starting with Far Cry 3, each game has had a spin-off that repurposes its map for something outside the box. In the decade and a half that Ubisoft has produced Far Cry games, it’s made much more than just the main, numbered entries.
With the series’ trip to the fictional Caribbean island of Yara in Far Cry 6 fresh in people’s minds, it’s as good a time as any to look through the scrapbook and recall everywhere Far Cry has taken players so far. It’s unclear if the series’ “murder vacation” premise is what Crytek intended in 2004 when the Far Cry franchise began, but it’s certainly what Ubisoft has gone with since taking up the mantle with Far Cry 3 and defining the franchise’s modern formula.
Almost every game in the Far Cry series drives a protagonist to the breaking point and forces them to tear through enemy forces for survival, although some have better reasons than others.