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Been diving deeper into how people are actually making money in the metaverse lately, and it's honestly more interesting than most realize. The whole space is still in that early discovery phase where new ways to earn passive income keep popping up.
So what exactly is this metaverse everyone keeps talking about? The term comes from an old sci-fi novel, but in Web3 terms it basically means digital worlds where you actually own your stuff. That's the key difference from old video games — your assets are real NFTs on the blockchain that you can trade freely. Companies like Walmart, Gucci, and Ralph Lauren are already moving in, betting the industry hits $800 billion within a couple years.
Let me break down what's actually working for people earning passive income in the metaverse right now.
First up is land rental. Platforms like Decentraland and The Sandbox let you own virtual property and rent it out. Companies are hungry for space to host events, so there's real demand. According to Pavel Sinelnikov from Metis DAO, the whole idea is creating "digital land ownership and the ability to buy, sell, and rent land and other virtual items." The economics here are still pretty opaque though — nobody's really sharing exact numbers on what landlords make.
Then there's asset leasing. Not everyone wants to drop serious money on expensive NFTs, right? Axie Infinity is the classic example. Players would lease Axies from managers to earn rewards, and the managers were basically getting passive income while scholars did the work. Some people in Venezuela were literally making a living this way. The cool part is that with blockchain, no single company can control these markets — you actually own your assets.
NFT creators are also cashing in through secondary market royalties. Every time someone resells an NFT you created, you get paid. Prakash Somosundram from Enjinstarter told me that "any wearable creator can earn royalties when the assets they create are sold on the secondary market." John Burris from IMVU pointed out that this "unlocks a true ownership and royalty model where royalties can and will continue to flow back to the original creator."
Gaming is massive in the metaverse. Some worlds are pure play-to-earn, others have gig-like economies. Decentral Games' ICE Poker is popular, and there are tower defense games generating revenue through NFT sales. The revenue models vary — some rely on asset sales, others on donations or royalties.
Advertising is another angle. Rent out billboard space in high-traffic areas and let brands pay for exposure. Though honestly, finding new advertisers when campaigns end means it's not totally passive.
Here's the reality though: true passive income doesn't really exist. Everything needs some maintenance. And the metaverse income game comes with real risks. You're dealing with crypto volatility, NFT speculation, and there's always the chance you bet on a metaverse world that gets abandoned. Somosundram mentioned that success really depends on whether that specific metaverse actually survives and stays active.
But the upside? As the metaverse grows, opportunities keep multiplying. Some creative entrepreneurs are building GameFi guilds that pool assets for leasing, or using services to mint wearable art that generates ongoing royalties. Over 200,000 active creators are already making thousands of new items for sale every month on platforms like IMVU.
The question is whether it's worth your time and money. There are no guarantees, and the space is still evolving rapidly. But if you're willing to take the risk and stay adaptable, the metaverse could offer real opportunities to build passive income streams as economic activity there continues expanding.