Axie Infinity Classic is back with Season 10, and this update keeps things lean. The focus is squarely on competitive PvP, cutting out side content like Adventure mode in favor of a cleaner, more skill-driven loop. At the center of it all is a leaderboard challenge offering a 1,250 AXS prize pool, or roughly $20,000 at current rates.

It’s a familiar setup for longtime players, but the rebalancing and tighter design aim to bring back a more competitive feel that rewards efficiency, timing, and decision-making over grind.

Adventure mode is out, PvP is in

One of the biggest changes this season is the removal of Adventure mode, a decision that immediately narrows the game’s focus to head-to-head matchups. That shift means no more daily grinding against AI for rewards. Instead, all progression and ranking now come from live matches.

This aligns with how most players are already engaging with Classic as a quick-strategy, back-to-back PvP battler. By cutting the fluff, the update encourages a more competitive mindset and frees the game from side loops that diluted the core experience. It also simplifies the incentive structure. If you want rewards, you’ll have to earn them in the arena.

Balance adjustments shake up the early-game meta

Season 10 also brings mechanical updates, most notably in how Energy and card draw work. These changes aim to reduce snowballing and make early turns less punishing. Tempo now feels more manageable, giving players more room to build toward mid-game strategies instead of winning or losing in the first three rounds.

Crit mechanics remain untouched for now, though their presence is still a point of contention among high-level players. For the moment, the focus seems to be on pacing, not RNG smoothing. Expect the early-season meta to feel fluid, with a few builds likely rising quickly until counter-strategies start to emerge.

1,250 AXS prize pool adds competitive edge

The leaderboard prize pool of 1,250 AXS gives players a concrete incentive to dive back in. It’s not an enormous sum by crypto standards, but it’s enough to drive participation among veterans and small-scale grinders. Top-ranked players stand to gain the most, but even mid-tier users can secure a payout with consistent match results.

The reward structure favors win streaks and sustained engagement, not just a few lucky matches. That model encourages repeat sessions and rewards time spent mastering the current meta not just jumping in at the end. For Axie Classic, which has settled into a more niche role within the broader Axie ecosystem, this is a straightforward way to keep the mode relevant.

Classic keeps its own lane as Origins evolves

It’s worth noting that Axie Classic now functions almost like a standalone legacy mode, separate from Origins and Homeland. There’s no major shift in tokenomics, no new SLP mechanics, and no updates to breeding or market systems tied to this release. The focus is purely on PvP, performance, and leaderboard positioning.

For new players entering through Origins, Classic may feel outdated. But for those who prefer its snappy, card-based pacing and direct match structure, Season 10 offers a refined version of the original formula minus the distractions.

If Sky Mavis continues to treat Classic as its own competitive sandbox, this model of tight, seasonal PvP with prize pools could remain viable, even without constant reinvention.

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