Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Pre-IPOs
Unlock full access to global stock IPOs
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
On November 30, the West African country of Niger made a big move—it directly announced the reclamation of control over all its uranium mines.
This includes the super deposit at Imouraren, which holds reserves of 200,000 tons.
Even more sensational, on November 27, a batch of uranium quietly left the Arlit mining area without anyone noticing, and the French company Orano only found out afterward. The French side was furious and threatened to take the matter to international court, accusing Niger of "violating the arbitration agreement."
Niger's General Abdourahamane Tchiani responded even more forcefully: "Uranium belongs to the people of Niger, not as a legacy left by your colonial era."
The logic behind this is actually very simple—in the past, foreign capital controlled the mines and profits flowed out of the country; now, the state wants to sell the resources itself, and Russia, Turkey, and Iran are all lining up to negotiate cooperation.
The wave of resource nationalism has now reached the core mineral sector.
**While the real world fights resource wars, the digital world is redefining "resources"**
Speaking of resources, another battlefield must be mentioned—game assets.
If uranium mines were the hard currency of the industrial age, then characters, equipment, and land in games are the new oil of the digital era.
What Yield Guild Games (YGG) is doing is quite interesting: turning game assets into productive tools that ordinary people can use.
In the Philippines, players who rent Axie NFT characters through YGG earn more per month than the average local office worker. There are similar cases in Brazil. Essentially, this is about restructuring the relationship between "work" and "assets" using NFTs—you no longer need to spend a lot of money upfront to buy equipment, as borrowed virtual assets can also help you earn real money.
One side is fighting for physical mines, the other is sharing digital mines.
But at the core, it's the same: whoever controls the resources has the power to speak.
It must be really tough for France now. This is resource nationalism awakening.
By the way, the YGG model also seems to follow this logic—whoever holds onto NFTs makes money.
The competition between digital mining and physical mining for dominance is quite interesting.
Wait, the Philippines earning more than office workers through Axie each month? That’s a pretty big gap.
Resource wars have shifted from real to virtual. In the future, whoever controls the chain will be the new overlord.
France still wants to pursue an international lawsuit? Haha, who still falls for that these days?
Resource nationalism is coming, and the game assets on YGG are also soaring. Truly, reality and virtual worlds are clashing.
The logic is really clear—whoever controls the resources has the say.
Over at YGG, those Filipinos’ monthly income surpasses that of office workers; now that’s what you call real wealth distribution.
The underlying logic of real uranium mines and virtual NFTs is actually the same: whoever controls the market calls the shots.
With models like YGG, Filipino workers are earning more than white-collar workers each month; it’s much more lucrative than traditional mining.
While France is still embroiled in lawsuits, Niger is already negotiating cooperation with Russia, Turkey, and Iran. The times have truly changed.
Both digital and physical mining are being reshuffled. Having pricing power is more crucial than owning the property itself.
When it comes to making money with NFT games, it's true that some Filipino players are earning more per month than regular jobs, but the risks are huge.
The wave of resource nationalism is here, who will be next?
I get the YGG logic, but how many can actually cash out steadily?
Uranium can be sold to Iran, Russia, or Turkey, but who can you sell game assets to... The gap is huge.
Control means having a voice; that line really hits home.
Is that monthly income figure for Filipino players real? Seems a bit exaggerated.
The battle over mineral resources has escalated to game assets now, impressive.