Short answer
pojedynki graczy can work in Gry blockchain when stakes are explicit, settlement is readable, and competitive state is separated from the main economy. The duel should feel serious without threatening the whole account.
The safest design treats pojedynki graczy as a bounded competitive mode. Players know what they risk, what they can win, what the fee or ticket means, and which systems are not affected by the duel.
The design tension
pojedynki graczy wants pressure. Blockchain actions can add real stakes or formal settlement. But too much pressure makes players avoid the mode, especially if a single fight can destabilize progress built over weeks.
The design tension is solved by boundaries: entry gates, tickets, matchmaking rules, reward limits, server verification, and a clear split between duel outcomes and the seasonal resource race.
Player benefit
Players benefit when pojedynki graczy is optional but meaningful. They can test skill, roster choices, and preparation without fearing that one loss will ruin mining progress, guild duties, or season contribution plans.
Readable stakes also make victories feel cleaner. A player should know whether they won a duel, earned a ticket reward, advanced a ranking, or triggered a settlement. Those outcomes should not blur together.
Cud example
Cud's pojedynki graczy separation can protect the main economy while still giving competitive players a place to care about duels. Mining cards, resources, and seasonal progress remain understandable even when pojedynki graczy has its own entry and settlement logic.
That separation is not a downgrade. It is a trust feature: players can choose competition without making every strategy decision hostage to duel volatility.
What to watch
Watch for pojedynki graczy systems that hide costs, mix duel rewards with main progression too aggressively, or make portfel prompts appear without clear competitive context.
A healthy pojedynki graczy mode makes risk legible before entry and keeps consequences proportionate after the match.
That proportionality is what lets players try again after losing instead of treating one bad duel as a reason to leave the mode.

