Hi folks,
Take a look at
https://landholder.clubLandholder club is an anonymous investment club of virtual landholders.
In the club you can take hold of a virtual land and own it exclusively. The owner of a virtual land can sell his land for any price.
By investing in the purchase of land, you can increase your crypto-capital several times.
I tried to sign up with my bitcoin address. However, it did not allow segwit addresses and it didn't allow bitcoin addresses with no balances. That makes no sense to me imo, as most crypto businesses would let you sign up even without an address with funds in it. Besides, the site apparently demands deposits to come from the exact address that one signs up with - not always possible if using a hosted wallet like Coinbase, and someone could easily mistakenly send money from another address, leading to loss of funds.
The cost of unowned land is determined by the free market, i.e. the growth of demand leads to an increase in value, and a decrease in demand leads to a decrease in its value. The owner of a virtual land can sell his land for any price, paying 10% commission to the site (fee subject to change).
By investing in the purchase of land, you can increase your crypto-capital several times. You buy land at your own peril and risk, the success of your investment depends on your enterprise.
So according to the about section, this is just an investment game where you attempt to buy land at cheap prices and sell it later in hopes of someone else paying higher for it, right? Are there actually any utility value associated with the land? If not, it's quite a boring game and I doubt that anyone would be interested. At least have some feature where you can develop the land or something to increase the commercial value of it, before selling, or a virtual economy of some sort like Second Life. Otherwise, it's intrinsically valueless.
Also, who owns the land at the start? Do you own the land and sell it to buyers for a profit? Again, if that is true, then I really think that people will doubt your trustworthiness, especially with you holding all the land in the beginning and all the proceeds of the initial sale go to you.