Imagine walking into a casino, where the dealer’s hand always hides in a dark drawer, and you can only see the final outcome laid out on the table. In such a scene, a normal person would have already turned around and left. Yet, in today’s Web3 games, nine out of ten players and investors are actually playing this kind of game. Everyone is passionately discussing token models, graphics effects, and blockchain speeds, but they turn a blind eye to the core element hidden in the shadows—the random number generation mechanism.



To be more precise: smart contracts are like judges in a courtroom, and verifiable randomness functions (VRF) are judges who are absolutely impartial and cannot be bought.

Currently, most chain game projects treat randomness as a mere formality. Development teams often use block hash values as the source of randomness, which sounds familiar—like letting the village accountant decide the lottery numbers. On the surface, it’s transparent, but in reality, the accountant and the village chief could collude at the moment of recording the transaction. When a top-tier item worth tens of thousands of ETH is about to be generated, miners or validators with block production rights can exploit the tiny margin of manipulation to force the random result in their favor. Such predictability or manipulation of randomness leads to unfairness, which is the behind-the-scenes culprit behind the decline of many chain game projects.

By 2025, as full-chain games and autonomous worlds rise, VRF is no longer an optional feature but a critical dividing line for survival. The beauty of VRF lies in its “verifiable” aspect—it generates random numbers along with a cryptographic proof. To draw an analogy: it’s like rolling dice, but not only do you get a number, you also present proof of the entire process’s authenticity on the table.
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MoodFollowsPricevip
· 18h ago
Oh my god, finally someone has spoken out about this. I'm almost disgusted enough by these project teams. A single word from the miner can change the randomness; buying equipment here is no different from playing Russian roulette. And they still dare to call it decentralized, it cracks me up. For projects that don't implement VRF, I now just block them directly. Don't waste my gas fees.
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BearMarketBuyervip
· 18h ago
Wow, this is the real pitfall. No wonder so many blockchain game projects are failing. People are all bragging about token models, but no one cares what’s happening inside the black box. Manipulating random numbers has long been an industry secret. VRF should have been standard equipment long ago. It’s not just a bonus, it’s a lifesaver.
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CryptoDouble-O-Sevenvip
· 18h ago
Damn, this is the real shady deal. No wonder so many blockchain games have failed.
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MEVHunterZhangvip
· 18h ago
Wow, someone finally said it. I was wondering why so many blockchain games die mysteriously. The village accountant's analogy was perfect, spot on. Miners can do whatever they want to manipulate. It's 2025, and people are still playing with black box randomness. No wonder they get exploited. Blockchain games without VRF are truly unplayable for me. That's the basic bottom line, friends.
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SchrodingerWalletvip
· 18h ago
Haha, really? I already thought there were issues with the blockchain games I played before; the equipment drop rates were ridiculously low. You can see the dealer's hand in casinos, so why is Web3 even more opaque? VRF should have been standard equipment long ago. Who still dares to use hash values for randomness? That's laughable. Honestly, I don't dare to touch 90% of the blockchain games on the market; the black-box manipulation is too outrageous. A friend of mine lost a lot because of this—it's about miners manipulating the random numbers.
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ApeShotFirstvip
· 18h ago
Wow, this is the real truth. I used to foolishly think that blockchain games were all transparent. Wait, so my tens of thousands of yuan were just wasted? Why hasn't VRF become widespread yet? Really, projects without VRF still dare to launch? You guys are quite bold.
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