TL;DR
- Cambria secured $2 million in funding from BITKRAFT Ventures and Sky Mavis.
- The studio’s Gold Rush MMO will launch its third season in November.
- Duel Arena, a companion title, has reached $145 million in total wagered volume.
Cambria has raised two million dollars in strategic funding led by BITKRAFT Ventures and Sky Mavis. The new capital will support the expansion of its blockchain-based gaming environment, where digital economies are directly connected to competitive play. The studio designs titles that combine multiplayer formats with real economic stakes, aligning performance with financial risk.
Its flagship event, Gold Rush, will launch its third season in November. The tournaments apply risk-to-earn mechanics, allowing players to wager digital assets in competitive matches. During the second season, total wagers surpassed one and a half million dollars, with peak concurrent participation reaching 4,500 players, an eightfold increase from the first season.
Player Engagement and Cambria Economic Metrics
The companion title Duel Arena has processed a total wagered volume of 145 million dollars, according to public data from Dune Analytics. The game operates as a continuous competitive environment, and its economy is linked to Cambria’s other gaming products and digital assets.
Cambria’s non-fungible token (NFT) collections hold a combined market value of 5.3 million dollars. Key series include Founders, Cores, and Islands. The Islands collection introduced virtual land ownership on the Ethereum blockchain. Holding these NFTs grants taxation rights and development privileges within the game world, and qualifies owners for a future token distribution.
The partnership with Sky Mavis strengthens Cambria’s integration within the Ronin network, placing the studio among established projects on the platform. The recent funding will enable deeper development of crypto-native game economies, aimed at creating sustainable models for player-owned digital assets. Cambria is defining a niche where high-stakes competition meets verifiable digital ownership.






