Good afternoon everyone, it's Wednesday, or the middle of the week, which by the way is proving to be incredibly hot here in Spain this summer. And as I see it, things are getting worse, because if we continue like this, we'll have to emigrate to other planets, but at 48, I don't think I'll see that.
Well...today I'm bringing you the StakeHouse Den game on the ArcadeColony platform, and I decided to simulate what a $500 investment in the game would be like, considering all the elements involved, from purchasing packs to staking and generating rewards. As you know, StakeHouse Den is a casino game where we can find
the idea is that this simulation as I already did and here are the links, https://hive.blog/hive-13323/@wizloge/genesis-league-goals-complete-investment-simulation-with-dollar500 and https://hive.blog/hive-13323/@wizloge/web3-investment-simulation-in-moonkarts-the-roi-i-didnt-expect serve as an approximate guide for those who are thinking of entering this ecosystem and want to understand how their investment could behave over time, but as the name says it is a simulation and I am human and I can also be wrong in some value or number.
Now I'm going to go into great detail about how I spent these $500 and on what products.
So let's imagine that hive currently has a price of 0.5, which I set higher than it is now.
Up to this point I think everything is clear and the numbers right now, if I'm not mistaken, are correctly placed.
Element | Estimate |
---|---|
Purchased packs | 147 ($3.40 each) |
HotSauce/day | ~14.7 |
COL/day | ~0.441 |
COL/month | ~13.2 |
Investment refund (~$500) | ~31 years |
As you can see in the table I made, this is very clear if you get to the point where it says ~31 years.
Yes, as you can see at first glance, this may seem crazy, but I want to point out that these are mathematical calculations I made, and they can always be exact, since you have to keep in mind that cards with epic or legendary rarity have a much higher HotSauce production, and this is a variation. I also haven't considered the luck factor, since you can multiply winnings within the game's casino, where some players claim to have won significant sums at roulette or slots. And that would give a very different mathematical result. Another option is trading cards on the secondary market, where you can obtain extra benefits if a high-rarity card is in demand by other players. This adds an additional layer of strategy and speculation to the game's ecosystem. And that would also give a very different mathematical result.
This means there are many variables to consider, but what you have to keep in mind is that if all of those variables weren't the case, or if only one variant appeared and the other didn't, the outcome would be the same.
Hi @wizloge
Honestly I think you are not up to date on this game and have not delved into the dynamics and have not read the whitepaper. The rewards have never been active and that is why this analysis of yours has no concrete basis.
How can I recover in 31 years an investment in a game that still has no rewards?
The only data you have is the cost of Lady luck packs
You write that with 147 packs of cards purchased you would earn 14.7 hot sauce per day? On what basis if you make this calculation?
I purchased only 25 packs and with only 35 staked cards I produce 132 hot sauce per day.
Your analysis at this stage has no basis because the rewards are not active and I honestly don't know how you can calculate the colony earnable per month of something that doesn't exist.
I was intrigued and interested in your title but then reading I found out that you did not invest but simulated an investment in a project/game and your analysis has no data to justify your calculations
I am really curious how you arrived at your results
Thank you very much @libertycrypto27 for your comments and before doing this simulation the first thing I wrote was this
And I'm checking that because you tell me I was wrong in my numbers, but I also said that there are many variants in this; if something changes, the simulation changes too. I took all the information from the page, but you tell me I'm unfounded, and I respect and appreciate that. When I make a post, I always say that if I'm wrong, they should leave it in a comment. But I'm seeing that people, or very few people, don't bother to read it, which you did, and I'm happy about it. So, to conclude, what you tell me is another variant of a result, that's what I think.
Hi @wizloge
I initially interacted with you in good faith because no one is perfect and everyone can make mistakes but I would have expected another response instead of:
I asked you two specific questions about your simulation calculations.
You did not answer me because I think there are no calculations behind your simulation.
Your simulation does not have a correct or real calculation and I explained why.
1 ladyluck packs costs 4 SCRIPT = 6.12 HIVE = $1.47
The reward token is COLONY, not COL (which doesn't exist).
No rewards have ever been distributed yet! Calculating a "31-year ROI" makes no sense in this context = is an imaginary calculation.
There's no direct correlation between number of packs and Hot Sauce production: it depends on card rarity, merge count, and staking slots.
To stake NFTs and produce Hot Sauce, it's mandatory to stake 2 SCRIPT per NFT, something completely ignored in your post.
Your estimated daily Hot Sauce (14.7/day for 147 packs) is absurdly low because I produce almost 10 times that with only 25 packs and 35 staked cards.
The title says “I invested $500”, but the entire analysis is a simulation based on incorrect or invented data.
Hive is a great place to share opinions and ideas, but also a place where accurate information matters
But above all, the reader deserves respect, and you have not respected him.
You could have written for example “I made a mistake and made imaginary calculations without data or without delving into the dynamics of the game” I would have appreciated your sincerity.
Nothing personal but this post is worth 0 because it does not respect the reader. For this reason I downvoted this imaginary simulation.
In the next ones try to do correct analysis with correct data and show how you arrived at your results otherwise on Hive anyone can throw random data passing it off as true.
Hive rewards should go to content that adds value, not confusion.
Please take more care with data and facts in your future posts
@hivewatchers I am not an AI expert but this post with so much invented data looks like (I have no certainty) a post generated by a wrong prompt with little and incorrect data provided
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Hello.
To confirm your authorship of the content, could you please add the link to your Hive blog to a profile on a well-established social media account like Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter (which has not been recently created)?
After you add the link, please respond to this comment with the URL link to that website.
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Thank you.
More Info: Introducing Identity/Content Verification Reporting & Lookup
https://x.com/wizloge/status/1946400926043951599
https://x.com/wizloge
This is my X account so you can see that I am not a bot and I am a physical person.
Hello.
Thanks for the reply.
There is always a physical person behind every created bot.
The Twitter account that you provided does not fulfil the request above.
It is not well well-established account.
It is an empty account that was created for the sole purpose of linking it to Hive.
Could you please provide a social media account that shows the lifestyle of a real person?
The request for verification has been forwarded because of the history of use of AI-generated writing by this account.
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