Splinterlands: The Inestimable Value Of Winning & Losing

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I've been playing splinterlands for a year now and I think I bought some of those cards when they were quite pricey. My deck was worth x10 of what it currently is about 10 months ago, however, while I do not regret that choice, I also think that one's not supposed to measure the success they've achieved in monetary incentives alone. However, it's always difficult for people to refer to little wins in their investment journey.

I once bought a card for about $14 and instantly resold it for 15$, I once got a level three card from one of the packs I opened, sold it for $24, and bought some DEC with it, this DEC was used to earn me some SPS which I've staked to keep earning me tiny drops of SPS even up till today.


Weighing The Small Things

Although in the grand scheme of things, the value of my deck has reduced, I've Opened packs bought for $4 and only got $0.5 worth of value from them, so it's always easier to count one's failures especially when we cannot balance the gratification we got from getting small wins with losing when it mattered the most.

Small wins should be that
validation that you probably need to cultivate when you think you've made a logical and credible investment choice but it's hardly paying any financial dividends. However, when it comes to the decision I made to start playing splinterlands in September of 2021, I'm still trying to recall to see if I made that investment calls out of FOMO or necessity but I exactly cannot tell.


Necessity & FOMO

I counted it as a necessity, because I felt it was one way to diversify, but I waited too long because I felt the learning process would be mind-zapping, time-consuming, and exhausting. I was right, it was, and it still is, but I'll also see it as FOMO because the game was taking huge leaps out of nowhere and I felt that if I didn't come in at that moment, I might miss the golden age of splinterlands and I wouldn't want to live that.

The fear of missing out creates a necessity for choices you're originally not motivated for. There are times when investment decisions might linger because we're scared of the difficulties that might come with it, but the prospects of what we might eventually miss become a motivating factor, now this isn't completely positive as it also comes with some downsides.

However, I wouldn't say I've lost, even if it feels that way sometimes and this is because I've been training my mind to see the little wins I've accumulated over time especially when I've faced disappointing outcomes.

Why is this?

When you're not completely losing, then you're making progress, although there are times we want to measure our progress with giant strides, we cannot. There's the frustration that comes with winning slowly. I've seen people measure their effort with their input but this cannot be totally applicable to crypto and other crypto projects.


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The efforts we put in when it comes to crypto-related projects have the propensity to pay off for life, the immediate value might be very small, but over time it'll make a huge difference. But then, it still boils down to the fact that patience and understanding are two values we must cultivate when we're not dealing with conventional investments.


Seeing The Value Of Experience

For example, people fail to measure experience as a reward when the aspect of money isn't forthcoming, however, experience is expensive, even if you cannot primarily exchange it for monetary rewards, it can be purchased with non-monetary values. For example time, Time time is used to purchase experience, which in turn makes it easier to obtain expertise or mastery.

A lot of people think that mastery is directly translational to money, and while this is true, it's not always true. Some people find it difficult to accept the fact that they'll fail sometimes in life, they feel this is a bad thing, but then they forget that mastery is attained by getting it right after countless failures.

So, money might be the endgame but we have to train our minds to take the positives, or else we might see the futility in every one of our efforts which in turn creates massive discouragements. One of the positives I've taken is that I've created a niche by playing splinterlands. This might be deemed very usual but then, my experiences might be a learning curve for people who actually play the game, which means by reading my posts, they might not have to repeat the mistakes I made.

Why is this necessarily a good thing?

In business situations, it's difficult for you to see people who want to collectively win and the reason for this is that in real-world situations people often need to cheat others to win rather unfairly.


Experience & Collectively Winning

However, the sphere we're in is designed for people to collectively win. this is another great positive, but it's always difficult to place a value on it because we cannot attach monetary worth to it. Like I've said, we need to train our minds to spot and make references to the little wins we've achieved over time, this is because we'll forever remember our loses and when we do, it takes away the confidence and motivation to keep going.

This is why some people never recover after a bear market. They're caught up wallowing in regret of what they could have done in the last bull market, thereby making it difficult for them to prepare for the next. See and appreciate your little wins, they're not irrelevant or insignificant.




Interested in some more of my works?


The Intrinsic Propensity To Spend Money
Poverty: The Unwillingness To Spend?
A Scenic Bathroom Photoshoot
The Importance Of Having A Contingency Money Plan
Translational Value; What Is Your Worth?
Using Crypto As A Means Of Transferring Will

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19 comments
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The interesting thing about Splinterlands is that there's no actual pattern to winning and losing, in financial terms.

One thing I know for sure is that, if you properly time the market and invest wisely, you could set yourself up for a world of profit in the long run. It all depends on your approach.

For example, in the way you opened a $4 pack and got only $0.5 worth of cards, someone else could find $30 worth of cards inside but that won't matter if you both don't apply the monsters. Those 50 cents worth of monsters could improve your deck and enable you get reward chests that compensate for the "loss" in packs. Whereas, the other person that finds $30 cards inside might not even play the game and in the long run, the 50 cents traps more dividend.

Another thing you need to keep in mind is that, in Splinterlands, time is a big factor in determining the value of your assets. Those 50 cents of monsters could easily be worth $20 in the future. I've lived through it from way back in the Beta monster days through untamed to Rift Watchers. If you have a discerning eye, you could spot some rare monsters that have huge potential and stack it for the future.

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This is absolutely true. One thing I've come to realize is that accumulating and putting one's investment into good use could potentially become a gamechanger. I've played the game for a year now, and I can tell you that I perfectly understand what you mean, I've been solidly building my deck and it's become an enjoyable experience, I must tell you. So I'm really not in a rush to make profit as I'm more of the long-term person. I actually appreciate everything as I've come across players who have immensely helped me along the way.
The scenario you mentioned is just true, sometimes people don't even know the value of some $0.50 cards in-game.

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(Edited)

Those 50 cents of monsters could easily be worth $20 in the future. I've lived through it from way back in the Beta monster days through untamed to Rift Watchers.

I also saw it. I started playing Splinterlands on 2018.12.30. I bought the Beta starter set on that day for $10 USD worth of Steem. It took one or two years (I do not remember exactly) to earn back the initial investment, but then I earned hundreds of dollars with Splinterlands by regularly playing it. Nowadays my Splinterlands card collection is worth $175 USD. And I sold a lot of Splinterlands cards in the previous few years.

Nowadays I do not play Splinterlands, but I still earn money from it by leasing out my Splinterlands cards. I use Splex.GG to automatically lease out my Splinterlands cards. It takes a daily 10% from the earnings, but the service maximizes the return on the card leasing, so it is worth it in the long run.

They have an Archmage Bot too, which can automatically play the game instead of you, but I have not tried that service so far, so currently I do not have any experience with that.

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Sweet one Jose and thank you for giving me an idea on a topic to write about. The small gains or even losses in investments don't necessarily impact the result if the investment is a sustainable one, the result is what matters not the little bumps along the way.

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Exactly, sometimes the losses along the way is not a testament of how that investment might turn out, especially if it's a viable project, I think it's one of the lessons splinterlands has taught me so far.

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It's tough but we are in a bear market right now. So I don't expect my prices to fully rise like crazy. Especially with all the new cards out, I think we will have to wait till chaos legion packs are all sold for any significant price increases.

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I think the CL packs will slowly sell out and we might have to wait for months.. but it's a good thing in the sense that new players can still build their deck using the CL packs that's still cheap at the moment to build.

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(Edited)

I find myself in a situation very similar to yours, didn't invest exactly at the peak but almost. My cards depreciated heavily in value in the beginning of the bear market but I am still not complaining about my losses. I really like Splinterlands and what they are building. I have seen many P2E games in this last bull market but none with such a solid economic foundation as splinterlands, hence I'm not worried about my investments.

people fail to measure experience as a reward when the aspect of money isn't forthcoming, however, experience is expensive

Couldn't agree more. Lost a bunch of money in 2017 in the last crypto market crash but what I learned was invaluable. That experience has compounded my current investments and is something most people do not take into account. Good that you put that into words, sometimes we consider value-less the things we learn on the way.

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Hahaha I like splinterlands too, there's this emotional affinity I have for it. I'm not worried about the value of my deck at the moment and this is because I'm actually using them to play the game, so I think I'm happy to continue my accumalation process.
The market itself is a lesson and it teaches us everyday. This is why I still tap from the positives of the Market to do better at all time. There's nothing like having rich experience in crypto.

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I know a lot of person who don't have interest in small gains. Though, I couldn't blame them as I believe that we are naturally drawn to big changes. I also used to be one of them but that changed when I see how most big businesses makes their profit.

My Splinterlands card portfolio also dropped a significant value, but didn't sell my rewards cards as I think they are still under priced. I am currently renting out most of my cards, but back when I was actively battling, this 5 cents cards are providing me the necessary collection power to battle at higher leagues. 😊

!1UP

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I know, it's not everyone who's interested in small games, this is true. For someone like me though, I'm interested in whatever I can nurture. Anything that can grow potentially, I'm up for it. So I'm interested in any game.

As for the value of my deck. I think I'm more happy about the in-game value that I derive from it at the moment and this is probably why I didn't really see it as a big deal. Hahaha I can see you're renting some cards out. The truth is that, it's way better than selling them off for cheap at the moment.

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Yup. I am renting most of them. I took a break in playing the ranked battles but I am pretty active in Guild Brawls. Need to participate or else they will kick my *ss. 😅

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But aren't you dropping down the leagues since you're not active playing ranked battles?

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