Moku has officially released Moki Pochi Attack on Discord. At the same time, the studio announced that it is shutting down two of its early products: Moku Questing and Tamameme. Both changes were confirmed by Moku Co-Founder Hantao in back-to-back posts on X, shared on July 8 and July 9.
These updates mark a major shift in direction for the web3 gaming studio. Moku is moving away from early experiments and into full development on Grand Arena, its new AI-driven battler.
Moki Pochi Attack Goes Live on Discord
Players can now launch Moki Pochi Attack directly in Discord. According to Hantao, the alpha version is live inside Discord Activities. Players just need to hit the "launch" button, search for "Moki Pochi," and start playing.
The game had already proven popular in its early Moku HQ release, with over 10,000 daily users at launch. Now, with its move to Discord, the team is aiming to reach an even wider audience by offering simple access inside the chat platform.
Moku Questing Shuts Down in 48 Hours
As of July 9, Moku has begun shutting down Moku Questing. The feature had lived on the main Moku HQ website. Players used it to complete social tasks, join in-game events, and earn points that could be spent in reward shops or raffles.
Now, the whole system is being moved over to Discord. All points, levels, and progress will carry over. A new Discord questing tool will take its place, with weekly shop drops and continued reward options.
According to Hantao, the reason for this shutdown is focus. Moku HQ was first designed to support other game launches on Ronin. That chapter is over. The team is now focused on making its own games, and building deeper tools inside Discord and Grand Arena. Keeping multiple questing tools active no longer made sense.
Tamameme to Close Down in 2 Weeks
Moku also confirmed that Tamameme, the token launchpad it created earlier this year, will go offline within two weeks. The frontend of the platform is going away, but the smart contract itself will stay online.
That means players can still sell their tokens via Katana, Ronin's decentralized exchange. But they won't be able to see price updates on the Tamameme site. They'll just get the RON value directly.
The Tamameme validator is also being turned off. That means no more token votes or buybacks. Some of the remaining Tama tokens will be given out in Moku's Discord reward shop. The team hinted that the system may return in some form later once Grand Arena is live.
Hantao described Tamameme as a fast, fun experiment. It was built in two months and saw early success when Open Ronin launched. Over 13,000 tokens were created in just one week, with $25 million in trades. However, he said the chain can't currently support a full-scale token launcher, and the team is better off focusing on their new game.
What This Means for Moku Players
If you've used Moku Questing, your points, levels, and progress will be moved to the new Discord questing tool. The Moku HQ site will shut down within 48 hours of the July 9 announcement. A new shop will be added weekly inside Discord with prizes, and the team plans to bring this system into Grand Arena when it launches.
For Tamameme users, the main action is to watch your token holdings. You can sell them on Katana even after the site closes, but prices won't be displayed. Some Tama tokens may show up as Discord rewards, but the main phase of the platform is over.
About Moku Questing
Moku Questing (the Moku HQ site) was a social mission platform that let players earn points by completing tasks across the Moku ecosystem. It worked with multiple games, including quests themed around NFTs and partner tokens. Points could be used for raffles, airdrops, and gacha spins.
As of July, Moku is migrating all of this to Discord. It's the same idea, just more focused, with tighter integration into Moku's upcoming products.
About Tamameme
Tamameme was a fair-launch token platform on Ronin. It launched in January 2025 and let anyone create and trade tokens without insider deals or private sales. It ran early events like the Ratz Race, which gave out over $40,000 in RON and NFTs. Tokens could be created and shared with full transparency.
Despite early success, the platform is closing its frontend. Its smart contract will still run, and users can still trade. But the team sees no reason to keep the site active with current blockchain volumes too low to support a thriving launchpad.
Grand Arena Is the New Focus
With the sunset of Tamameme and Moku Questing, Moku is turning full attention to Grand Arena, its next major release. Grand Arena is an autoplay fantasy battler where players use NFT characters to fight in AI-controlled matches.
The game will allow NFT owners to earn royalties every time their assets are used. AI agents will control matches, and players can sit back and watch or train agents to improve over time. The system is built to be hands-off, but still offers deep strategy. Moku is designing multiple gameplay modes, loadout systems, and tournament play.
Grand Arena also plays a big role in the Moku ecosystem. The team plans to pull in leftover rewards from both Moku Questing and Tamameme, using them in the game or in the Discord shop.

What Is Moku HQ?
Moku HQ was the central site for all of Moku's early tools. It launched as a web3 gaming hub with over 300,000 players, helping games launch on Ronin with built-in reward systems and social tasks.
It supported token launches, game quests, and creator campaigns. Moku's own games like Super Battle Moki and early versions of Moki Pochi lived there too. It also hosted the Moki Genesis NFT collection, which offered airdrops and early access benefits.
Now, Moku is moving away from web-based tools. Everything is shifting to Discord and directly into the games they are making. Moku HQ served its role, but the future is focused on AI battlers and deeper gameplay.
Backed by Major Web3 Investors
Moku is supported by leading web3 investors like Sky Mavis, a16z Games Speedrun, Arca, Framework Ventures, and 32-Bit Ventures. In late 2024, the studio raised $5.35 million to grow its platform and build out its new titles.
That money is now going into the next phase: a Discord-based ecosystem and Grand Arena as the flagship game. With Moki Pochi Attack now live, and Moku Questing and Tamameme closing soon, the studio is entering a new era focused fully on gaming.














