
The utility token powering Playnance's on-chain gaming and prediction ecosystem goes live this month, backed by a live network already processing roughly 2 million daily transactions.
Key Takeaways
G Coin launches March 18 with 200,000+ holders and ~$38M estimated market cap before trading begins
The token runs on PlayBlock, Playnance’s gasless Layer-3 blockchain handling ~2M transactions per day
Fixed supply of 77 billion tokens, no future minting, with structured vesting to limit sell pressure
Playnance’s ecosystem spans 300,000+ accounts, 30+ game studios, and 10,000+ live on-chain games
The standard playbook involves raising money, shipping a whitepaper, and hoping the product catches up to the valuation before interest fades. Playnance, a Web3 infrastructure company founded in 2020, skipped that sequence entirely. When G Coin hits the market on March 18, it won’t be looking for users – it already has them.
More than 200,000 wallets are holding the token ahead of its Token Generation Event. Around 13 billion G Coin were distributed during the presale phase, and the estimated pre-launch market cap sits at roughly $38 million. Those numbers didn’t come from hype. They came from an ecosystem that has been running in production for years before the token was ever formally introduced to the market.
The Infrastructure Behind the Token
G Coin functions as the single economic layer across Playnance’s portfolio of digital entertainment platforms – covering gameplay, predictions, settlements, and rewards. The network currently counts more than 300,000 registered accounts, integrates with over 30 game studios, and runs upward of 10,000 on-chain games. It also processes interactions tied to more than 2.5 million sports events per year.
All of this runs on PlayBlock, Playnance’s proprietary Layer-3 blockchain. The chain is built for volume: zero gas fees, near-instant settlement, full on-chain transparency, and non-custodial architecture throughout. Current throughput sits at approximately 2 million transactions per day.
On the supply side, G Coin is capped at 77 billion tokens with no future minting possible. Tokens lost through gameplay are locked for 12 months before they return to circulation.
Unsold tokens at the TGE face a 12-month cliff, followed by a 24-month linear vesting schedule. The mechanics are structured to limit the kind of sudden supply floods that have killed momentum for similar launches.
Why It’s Worth Paying Attention
Web3 gaming has a credibility problem. The last cycle produced dozens of projects that promised blockchain-native entertainment and delivered speculative token schemes dressed up as games. Most of them are gone.
What makes the G Coin launch worth watching isn’t the token itself – it’s the sequencing. Playnance built the product first, grew real user activity, and is now formalizing the economic layer underneath it. That’s a different risk profile than what the market has become accustomed to seeing.
CEO Pini Peter stated plainly: “On March 18, G Coin will enter the market with real adoption already in place.” Earlier this year, the company also reported that its “Be The Boss” operator program crossed $2 million in real cash payouts to participants, with total ecosystem revenue surpassing $5.3 million – figures that point to actual commercial activity, not just on-chain noise.
About Playnance
Playnance has been operating largely outside the spotlight since it was founded in 2020. Based in Ramat Gan, Israel, with a presence in Dubai, the company spent its early years building rather than marketing. Its core product stack includes PlayBlock, a real-time payout engine, an on-chain smart contract system, and PlayWall – a decentralized wallet infrastructure designed to abstract blockchain complexity for mainstream users.
The philosophy is straightforward: let people interact with blockchain products without knowing they’re doing it. Users onboard through familiar Web2-style interfaces. Everything else happens in the background. It’s not a novel concept, but Playnance is one of the few companies that appears to have actually executed it at scale.
The company also runs Playnance Partners, a white-label program that allows third parties to build on PlayBlock infrastructure – adding another layer of ecosystem expansion that doesn’t depend entirely on Playnance’s own platform growth.
What Comes Next
The March 18 TGE is a starting line, not a finish. Peter has signaled at upcoming product developments without specifying what they are “many other surprises on the way,” in his words which leaves the roadmap deliberately vague for now.
What’s clearer is the structural direction: G Coin is meant to serve as the connective tissue across gaming, sports prediction, and financial markets on PlayBlock, with the fixed supply model and vesting schedules signaling an orientation toward long-term ecosystem value rather than short-cycle speculation.
Whether that holds depends on continued platform growth and Playnance’s ability to keep expanding its user base and partner network after the public launch. The foundation is there. The real test starts on March 18.