Rock Paper Scissors PvP

On-chain player-vs-player Rock Paper Scissors: deposit to the in-game wallet, queue for a match, winner takes the pot after fees—loser loses the staked amount.

Stake-based — net payout = opponent deposit minus fees

  • Fund an in-game balance before you can enter matchmaking
  • Find an opponent from the queue for a head-to-head round
  • Outcomes settled on-chain with verifiable game rules
  • Winner receives the rival’s stake minus protocol or house fees
  • Loser forfeits the full amount committed to that match
  • High-risk, zero-sum economics—treat stakes as money you may lose

Rock Paper Scissors PvP treats each duel as a short wagering session: both sides lock value into escrow or an in-game ledger, reveal their move according to the contract or game client, and settlement moves the combined stake to the winner after fees. The model is deliberately harsh for the defeated player—their contribution to the pot is gone once the round closes.

How it works

Players first deposit into the product wallet so the matcher knows they can cover a wager. After joining the queue, the system pairs two funded accounts, collects aligned stakes for that table, runs Rock–Paper–Scissors resolution, and distributes funds: the winning address receives opponent funds minus any service or network fee baked into the rules. A tie or rematch policy, if any, would be defined in the shipped smart contracts and UI.

Risks

This is real-money or real-token gameplay with binary outcomes. Slippage, MEV, client bugs, or ambiguous move timing can all cause losses beyond “losing fair and square.” Read audits, fee tables, and jurisdictional restrictions before touching mainnet—this portfolio entry is descriptive only.