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2023’s true GOTY has had its name and assets jacked by ‘some kind of crypto scam,’ while bootlickers assure the dev it’s actually great publicity

Chances are that, unless you happened to read my personal GOTY pick from 2023 or just have generally excellent taste in videogames, you’re not too familiar with Stonks-9800 (which you can find on Steam). That’s a shame, because the early access stock-trading sim set in the salad days of ’80s Japan is an absolute banger—oozing style and with a delicious platter of gameplay loops that will keep your eyes fixed on its line graphs for days, weeks, months at a time.

Stonks-9800 is excellent, relatively obscure, and comes from a solo dev who doesn’t have the legal resources of a major publisher, which might go some way to explaining why its assets, characters, and name have been purloined by crypto bros claiming affiliation with the SPX6900 coin. Their website plasters itself in art and assets taken from the game and even the Stonks-9800 name itself: “Stonks‑9800 Gave Birth to SPX6900,” claims the site, falsely.

The STONKS9800 coin website, festooned with ripped art from the game. I’ve blurred the wallet address in the top right. (Image credit: Ripped game art by Ternox / website and AI art by anonymous crypto bros)

I say “falsely” because, well, it’s false. For all its posturing as a successor and tribute to Stonks-9800, this site and its coin have nothing to do with the game beyond the assets it’s ripped. To add to the brazenness, I don’t think it truly has anything to do with the actual SPX6900 coin—the webpage’s links take you to price-tracking pages for a far more obscure and less valuable coin called, you guessed it, STONKS9800.

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