Hamster Kombat developers rolled out an update to the daily secret code, revealing a new password that was shared publicly on the game’s Telegram channel under the label “300 Kryptan.” The reveal appears to be part of the game’s ongoing daily code challenge, which blends puzzle solving with in-game rewards and community participation. Players interested in where the code comes from should know that it originates from the game’s official communications channel and is distributed for a limited time as part of the daily event cadence.
Participants who crack the code within the window from September 3 to September 4 will win a substantial prize: 1 million in-game HMSTR currency. The entry is designed around Morse code, and players activate the mode from the game’s main menu under the “Daily Code” section. This setup encourages users to interpret short and long input signals, translating them into meaningful letters to unlock the prize. The process is straightforward: a short press represents a dot, while a long press stands for a dash. For illustration, the code sequence used to spell the word DEPOSIT follows this breakdown: S: “- . .”; E: “.”; P: “. – – .”; HE: “- – -”; Q: “. . .”; I: “. .”; T: “-”. Participants who master these patterns can claim the reward before the deadline, which is fixed at 22:00 on the following day, after which a new code takes its place and starts a fresh countdown.
Hamster Kombat positions itself as a viral, Telegram-based clicker game in which players accumulate points by repeatedly tapping a hamster, solving coded puzzles, and flipping or collecting revealed cards. The developers have indicated a future plan to convert accumulated points into cryptocurrency, contingent on the crypto asset’s listing scheduled for September 26. Still, notable industry voices have cautioned players about the real-world feasibility of token distribution. Vladimir Smerkis, a former head of Binance CIS, has warned that distributing tokens to a large player base can present significant logistical challenges. Oleg Lupikov, a blockchain expert, has urged players to temper expectations about earning sizable sums from the game, emphasizing that token economics and exchange mechanics often drag on longer than anticipated. These perspectives help frame the project as an experiment at the intersection of gaming and decentralized finance.
Beyond Hamster Kombat, the Telegram-based crypto game scene includes several other titles that have attracted attention for similar mechanics. An ecosystem of simulations and play-to-earn concepts exists in projects such as Blum, Catizen, Lost Dogs: The Way, TapSwap, X Empire, and a number of comparable offerings. Each of these projects explores the allure of earning through micro-actions, card collection, and coded challenges, while navigating the complexities of crypto liquidity, token issuance, and exchange readiness. For players and observers, this landscape highlights a broader trend: the push to turn attention and engagement into verifiable digital assets, even as practical hurdles and regulatory considerations remain in flux.
Earlier reports indicated that internal disagreements among the Hamster Kombat creators contributed to questions about the game’s entry into a crypto exchange. This tension underscores how competing visions within development teams can shape whether and how a project pursues broader financial integration. While fans hope for a seamless transition, critics point to the same risk factors—token volatility, distribution hurdles, and the potential for uneven value realization among players. In short, the project sits at a crossroads where gameplay, community participation, and token economics must align to create lasting momentum in the market.