Guild of the Guardians is an NFT collectible game.

Immutable’s Guild of the Guardians NFT game teams up with NRG Esports

Immutable has established an alliance with NRG Esports to create nonfungible token (NFT) collectibles for the upcoming Guild of the Guardian’s mobile RPG.

The Ukraine-based Stepico Games is developing the blockchain game for publisher Immutable, which is known for its Magic-like digital collectible game Gods Unchained, which has a marketplace for selling NFTs. Players can earn these NFTs — which use the transparent and secure ledger of the blockchain to verify authenticity — in-game and trade or sell on the marketplace. That means that these games will have uniquely identifiable digital items that players can earn or buy or sell, allowing the players to own the items permanently.

Guild of Guardians sold its first wave of founders collectible NFTs in June, raising $3 million. And now it will create NFT collectibles in partnership with the NRG Esports to tap into the competitive gaming market (which NFTs and blockchain haven’t turned to yet) and bolster fan engagement.

The partnership will mark the release of the NRG X Guild of Guardians hero — an in-game NFT playable character within the game’s universe. Players will be able to buy it in the next wave of Guild of Guardians’ founders NFT sale. One buyer will also get the chance to own an extremely rare “mythic” version of which only one will be produced.

The collaboration will also see the world-exclusive launch of NRG’s first NFT collectible, a tradable piece of digital art commemorating NRG’s success in various gaming championships in recent years.

Guild of the Guardians

Derek Lau is the game director for Guild of the Guardians.

Guild of the Guardians has been in development at Stepico in Ukraine for the past year, and Immutable is overseeing production. A team of 25 is working on the title. It will come out as a free-to-play game on Android and iOS.

“The vision of the game is to create a really fun and compelling mobile game played by millions of players,” said Lau. “It will enable everyone to turn their passion for gaming into assets. The audience has been pretty positive about it so far.”

Lau said that 250,000 players are already engaging with the game on different channels, including Twitter, Facebook, email, and Discord. It’s a squad-based multiplayer RPG with a fantasy setting. You build a team of heroes and fight for dominance. You can play as humans, elves, orcs, and others. The studio says it’s akin to Diablo, except that it has multiple characters fighting at once.

“You have a team of heroes and you send them into dungeons to fight against monsters and bosses, collect loot, craft equipment, and so on,” Lau said. “We have already sold some legendary heroes, which are characters you use to play the game.”

Guild of the Guardians will also have guilds of players, and if you want to join one, you have to own NFTs in the game. “The game is very strategic,” Lau said. “You need to think about the synergies between heroes, different elemental strengths and weaknesses, different combinations, as well as strategy and action elements.

The studio expects a soft launch early next year. Players can play the game with common items without having to buy premium NFTs. They can grind and earn items that they can use to craft NFT items. Some NFTs you can only get by working together with the rest of your guild.

Gods Unchained

Gods Unchained
Gods Unchained is a blockchain card game.

Immutable X is a marketplace for players in games such as Gods Unchained to buy and sell the items they have collected. Guild of Guardians will mint its NFTs on the carbon-neutral Immutable X platform, which has zero gas fees, instant settlement, and with little environmental impact, the company said.

Immutable X is from Immutable, the Australian team that runs the NFT trading card game Gods Unchained. This is an important NFT game, as it is built by a development team headed by Chris Clay, the former director of Magic the Gathering: Arena. Gods Unchained is a “play to earn” game, where players can earn collectibles over time, Immutable founder Robbie Ferguson said in a recent interview with GamesBeat. And they can make money by trading those collectibles, including the unique NFTs that can be proven by the blockchain, the secure digital ledger technology, to not be copies.

In the past few months, NFTs have exploded in other applications such as art, sports collectibles, and music. NBA Top Shot (a digital take on collectible basketball cards) is one example. Published by Animoca Brands and built by Dapper Labs, NBA Top Shot has surpassed $700 million in sales, five months after going public to a worldwide audience. And an NFT digital collage by the artist Beeple sold at Christie’s for $69.3 million. Investors are pouring money into NFTs, and some of those investors are game fans. The weekly revenues for NFTs peaked in May and then crashed, but now those revenues are bigger than ever.

As one of the highest-grossing blockchain games of 2020, Gods Unchained has logged millions of matches during its ongoing beta and boasts over 4 million assets, Immutable said. The token launch comes off the back of Gods Unchained’s latest expansion set, Trial of the Gods. That set sold out, Immutable claims, and a new expansion is on the horizon.

NRG partnership

Guild of the Guardians has teamed up with NRG.

NRG’s involvement is a validation for NFT games. Founded by Sacramento Kings co-owners Mark Mastrov and Andy Miller in November 2015, NRG has evolved into a well-known esports organization, claiming significant investment from some ex-pro athletes such as Shaquille O’Neal, Jimmy Rollins, and Alex Rodriguez.

NRG has esports teams for Fortnite, Rocket League, Apex, Call of Duty, and Overwatch, with multiple championship wins across numerous titles. The firm claims it has has content channels reaching over 34 million unique views per month — cultivating over 118 million fan engagements.

As part of the collaboration, Guild of Guardians will gain access to NRG’s fanbase, enabling the game to tap into a highly engaged demographic. Meanwhile, the partnership will allow NRG to take fan engagement to the next level by providing fans with a new and innovative way to interact with and potentially profit from their favorite teams. Introducing exclusive, collectible NFTs to fans also unlocks further monetization opportunities for NRG.

Derek Lau, the game director for Guild of Guardians at Immutable, said in an interview with GamesBeat that the rise of digital ownership is a huge indicator of what the next stage of the evolution of gaming and esports fan engagement will look like. He said he expects more esports brands to follow suit with their own collectible NFTs. By 2024, we will see 577.2 million esports viewers globally, according to market researcher Newzoo.

Dean Takahashi

Dean Takahashi is editorial director for GamesBeat at VentureBeat. He has been a tech journalist since 1988, and he has covered games as a beat since 1996. He was lead writer for GamesBeat at VentureBeat from 2008 to April 2025. Prior to that, he wrote for the San Jose Mercury News, the Red Herring, the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times, and the Dallas Times-Herald. He is the author of two books, "Opening the Xbox" and "The Xbox 360 Uncloaked." He organizes the annual GamesBeat Next, GamesBeat Summit and GamesBeat Insider Series: Hollywood and Games conferences and is a frequent speaker at gaming and tech events. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.