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Lily Liu Says Crypto Gaming Is Dead, Her Colleagues Responded With a Joke

source-logo  coinedition.com 21 March 2026 09:54, UTC
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Solana Foundation president Lily Liu declared blockchain gaming finished on Friday, triggering a wave of debate across the crypto community, and an unusually self-aware response from her own organisation.

Liu sparked a community-wide debate on Friday after declaring on X that “gaming on a blockchain is not coming back” — a response to reports that Meta was pulling the plug on Horizon Worlds, its much-ridiculed virtual world that somehow consumed $80 billion of the company’s money without convincing many people to actually log in.

The Comment Heard Across Crypto Twitter

Liu’s post was brief, unqualified, and landed like a grenade in a room full of blockchain game developers. No nuance, no caveats, just a clean verdict from the president of one of crypto’s most prominent foundations, on a chain that had staked considerable credibility on gaming becoming its killer use case.

Also, gaming on a blockchain is not coming back https://t.co/1GDmBrGaxg

— Lily Liu (@calilyliu) March 20, 2026

The timing was pointed. Meta’s retreat from its metaverse ambitions, a project so central that Mark Zuckerberg literally renamed his company after it, has become shorthand for what happens when billion-dollar optimism collides with user indifference.

The Punishment

Then came the internal response nobody expected.

Vibhu, a Solana Foundation employee, published a mock crisis communications statement that read, in part, that Liu’s remarks, while “factually correct and extremely based,” had caused irreparable harm to the gaming ecosystem.

Release from @SolanaFndn crisis comms:

We do not condone the statements made by the Solana Foundation President @calilyliu. These statements, while factually correct and extremely based, have done irreparable harm to our gaming ecosystem.

As a punishment, Lily has been asked to…

— vibhu (@vibhu) March 20, 2026

The post racked over 76,000 views before Vibhu quietly clarified it was a shitpost and that, for the record, the Foundation employs no actual crisis communications team. The clarification itself became the punchline.

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The Serious Pushback

Not everyone was laughing, though. Developers and community members drew a sharp distinction between the discredited play-to-earn model, which essentially paid people to click through bad games, and the underlying concept of player-owned digital assets, which many insist remains genuinely compelling.

“If by gaming you mean play-to-earn games with nothing behind scam tokens, they should never come back,” one X user wrote. “But vague posts like this without careful phrasing don’t sit right with gaming teams.”

The Verdict the Industry Is Avoiding

GameFi token values sit roughly 90% below their 2021 peak. Axie Infinity, once the sector’s brightest star, is now its most-cited cautionary tale. Billions from a16z, Animoca Brands, and Framework Ventures have yet to produce a single blockchain game with durable mainstream appeal.

Others said that Liu may simply have said what many insiders have privately concluded for some time.

Related: Crypto Gets Clarity as SEC, CFTC Say Most Tokens Aren’t Securities

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