Last year, I spent three weeks grinding a game on Ethereum. I finally saved up $200 in tokens and felt like I’d actually won. Then I tried to move my money.
The fee was $47.
I lost nearly a quarter of my "earnings" just for the privilege of clicking a button. I was so tilted I didn't touch a blockchain game for months. It felt like the whole system was rigged for rich people and I was just the exit liquidity.

Then a friend dragged me into @Vanarchain
I was skeptical as hell. I assumed every chain was just a different way to get fleeced. But I played a game on Vanar for a week, earned some tokens, and went to move them.
The cost? Pennies.
That’s when it clicked for me. Most of these networks are built for finance bros trading derivatives. Vanar is actually built for people who just want to play games. The token, Vanry, is the first time I’ve used a currency that didn't feel like it was punishing me for existing.

What this actually means
There are billions of gamers out there who don't give a damn about Other coins. but they do care about not getting ripped off.
On Vanar, if you hold Vanry, you actually get to vote on where the network goes. It’s not just some faceless corporation changing the rules while you're sleeping. You’re actually part of the build.
Is it real?
Look, I’m not some crypto guru. I’m just a guy who likes games and hates high fees. Here is what I know:
The games on Vanar are actually fun, not just sketchy tech demos.
Transactions are basically free.
We’re in Phase 1 right now.
Being early isn't about some "get rich quick" nonsense—it's about having a seat at the table before the rest of the world shows up. In three years, you’ll either be glad you checked it out or you'll be the person still paying $50 to move $200.
I know which one I'm choosing.
