MSTR2100, represented by the MSTR
token, is a
blockchain gaming project built around a free-to-play and play-and-earn model. It combines creature collection, base-building, and strategy gameplay with onchain
asset ownership, aiming to lower the entry barriers that limited earlier
GameFi titles. Rather than requiring users to purchase expensive NFTs before they can participate, Monsterra has positioned itself as a more accessible gaming ecosystem where players can begin for free and later interact more deeply with tokenized assets, land, and
staking systems.
[1] [2]
Background and project vision
Monsterra presents itself as a strategy game inspired by monster-battling and village-building titles, blending elements associated with collectible pet games and resource management gameplay. Its core objective is to
address two common weaknesses in blockchain gaming, high entry costs and fragile in-game economies. By emphasizing free access, multichain support, and a dual-token game economy, the project seeks to create a more sustainable loop between player participation, NFT utility, and token demand.
[3] [1]
The project emerged during the wave of GameFi development that followed the success of early play-to-earn games. Public fundraising materials indicate Monsterra completed several financing rounds, including private and public
token sale events, and raised
capital from crypto-focused investors. Reports around its early fundraising noted backing from firms such as Hashed and Shima Capital, which helped establish visibility in the GameFi
market.
[4] [5]
Technology, tokenomics, and network model
Technically, Monsterra has been described as a multichain blockchain game. In practice, that means the token and game assets are designed to operate across more than one
network environment, rather than relying on a single standalone blockchain with its own native
consensus. As a result, MSTR does not secure an independent base layer in the same way that a Layer 1
coin does. Instead, transfers and smart-contract interactions occur on the blockchains where the token contracts and NFT assets are deployed, inheriting the
security assumptions and consensus mechanisms of those underlying networks.
[1]
Within the game economy, MSTR functions as the primary utility and governance-oriented token. Project materials have associated it with staking, premium in-game features, ecosystem participation, and reward structures. Monsterra has also used a dual-token framework, where one token supports broader ecosystem value capture and another is used more directly in gameplay loops, a model commonly adopted in blockchain games to separate
governance and investment functions from routine in-game emissions. This structure is intended to reduce pressure on a single asset while keeping gameplay rewards active.
[1] [3]
Monsterra relies on smart contracts for token management, NFT ownership, staking, and in-game asset logic. Land plots, monsters, and certain gameplay items can be represented as blockchain-based assets, allowing users to hold, trade, or use them within the wider ecosystem. Because the project is application-layer infrastructure rather than a sovereign chain, network security depends on audited
contract design, treasury management, and the safety of the host chains and
wallet integrations used by players.
Use cases, founders, and ecosystem relevance
The primary
use case for MSTR is inside the Monsterra game universe. Players can use it for staking, participation incentives, and interactions tied to land, NFTs, or other premium mechanics. In a broader sense, the token supports a
digital property economy in which game progress and asset ownership are more portable and market-based than in traditional games. This makes MSTR relevant not as a payment coin or enterprise infrastructure token, but as a GameFi asset linked to player retention, NFT utility, and community governance.
[1]
Public summaries consistently describe Monsterra as being developed by a dedicated game and blockchain team, though detailed founder biographies are not always presented with the same visibility as infrastructure-focused crypto projects. What stands out more clearly is the project's design philosophy. Monsterra has tried to differentiate itself by combining free-to-play onboarding, multichain deployment, NFT-based gameplay assets, and staking-driven token utility. In a crowded blockchain gaming sector, that combination is its clearest point of distinction. It aims to make GameFi more accessible while preserving the ownership and reward mechanisms that drew users to the category in the first place. [2] [1]