Point Strike is framed as a precision-meets-luck challenge inspired by The Price Is Right. Players can pick any number from 0 to 1,000,000, then wait for the countdown to end, at which time a “Final Number” is revealed using an onchain process. The closest guess wins. If multiple entries land on the same closest result, the earliest entry takes the prize.
How Point Strike works
The rules are intentionally simple, with most of the strategy coming from timing and coverage rather than mechanical skill:
- Entry cost: 100 Premium Points per guess
- Guess range: 0 to 1,000,000
- Entry volume: submit as many guesses as you want during the live window
- Result: a Final Number is revealed at the end via an onchain mechanism
- Winner: closest guess wins; ties are broken by earliest entry
- Grand prize: 100,000 Premium Points
Because the Final Number is only revealed when the timer ends, Point Strike plays more like a probability and positioning game than a typical leaderboard sprint. Players can choose to spread guesses across the range, cluster around a thesis number, or adjust over time as the event clock runs down—while still relying on the final onchain reveal to settle the outcome.
Timing details players should note
Point Strike is scheduled with two time references, which matters if you’re coordinating entries across regions:
- Starts: Jan 6 at 06:00 UTC, which is listed as 2 PM SGT
- Ends: Jan 8 at 06:00 UTC, which is listed as 2 PM SGT
With a 2-day window between Jan 6 and Jan 8, the structure is designed for repeat participation rather than a single “one-and-done” entry.
Where this fits inside LOL Land
Point Strike is positioned as an add-on experience inside the broader LOL Land ecosystem rather than a standalone title. LOL Land is built as a casual, Monopoly-style crypto board game where players make moves across reward-oriented boards and collect a mix of digital items and progression resources. The game is published under YGG Play and is presented as running exclusively on Abstract, with rewards and progression that can include NFTs, tokens, points, and Abstract XP.
In that context, limited-time event formats like Point Strike make sense as lightweight “drop-in” activities that can sit alongside the main board-game loop. They also give the team room to test different reward structures—here, a single grand prize of 100,000 Premium Points—without turning the event into a long grind or requiring players to learn a new ruleset.
The key takeaway is the payout target: Point Strike is explicitly built around one outcome, decided by an onchain Final Number, with the 100,000 Premium Points grand prize going to the closest guess.















