FUNToken has rolled out its third mobile game, Infinite Sinkhole, in a move that adds another layer to its broader push into reward-driven Web3 gaming.
The premise is fairly straightforward at first. Players guide their way through a descending sequence of levels, each one more demanding than the last, with timing, control and quick decision-making doing most of the work. That simplicity at the start seems deliberate. The game is easy to pick up, but it does not stay easy for long.
Infinite Sinkhole is built around a dynamic gameplay loop, one that leans on repetition without feeling static. The further players go, the more complex the levels become, which gives the game its pacing and, really, its point. It is not just about lasting longer. It is about adapting as the mechanics become less forgiving.
That balance between accessibility and rising difficulty is clearly part of the design pitch. FUNToken appears to be aiming for a broader mobile audience here, not just crypto-native users already familiar with token-based ecosystems. The entry barrier is low. The challenge curve is not.
One detail that stands out is the player-first framing. Infinite Sinkhole launches without ads and without paywalls, which remains relatively uncommon in mobile gaming, especially in products designed around retention. The result is a cleaner experience, at least in theory, where progression is meant to come from play rather than interruption.
FUNToken is also keeping incentives close to the centre of the model. As players move deeper through the game, they receive rewards tied to their progress. That structure reflects the company’s ongoing strategy of linking gameplay with tangible user incentives, rather than treating rewards as an optional extra.
With Infinite Sinkhole, FUNToken is not changing its formula so much as refining it. The company is betting, again, that straightforward gameplay and visible progression can hold attention longer when rewards are built into the experience itself.
]]>
