EVE Online developer CCP Games has announced the winners of its latest hackathon to build mods and third party tools for its blockchain-based survival MMO, EVE Frontier. The winner, CradleOS, took home $25,000 for its in-game civilization-building tool, with a remaining $55,000 split among other winners.
Blockchain’s still a dirty word for me, but EVE Frontier is the only game I’ve seen to make a convincing argument for its own implementation. It’s also still in active development in the Year of Our Lord 2026, long after the gold rush endedā , and that’s a commitment I admire.
Frontier’s sell that always intrigued me is server-side modding at runtime. That is, you can create mods for yourself and other players without having to leave the game client.
That freeform modding experiment, coupled with CCP’s manifest history with digital economies, has made me always want to stay up to date with the project.
Frontier’s blockchain backend is, as I understand it, what lets its players so freely deploy modifications that other players immediately see, all without anyone logging off or leaving the client.
That’s unique in the MMO space, with most major players like FF14 or WoW alternating between benevolently ignoring and directly confronting mod scenes that exist on a constellation of Discord servers and external websites. Rather than being opt-in, modding is an inextricable part of EVE Frontier, and I just think that’s neat.
Last year’s Frontier hackathon saw the winner create a 4X-style minigame within the space sim, where the worlds of a solar system would be assigned biomes and resources for players to manage and cultivate. Someone else, naturally, also got Doom running on a Smart Assembly, the in-game space station at the heart of Frontier’s modding and resource management.
This year’s hackathon winners were:
- CradleOS: A bespoke UI and system to manage, coordinate, and govern resources and territory in-game, with an in-universe story about a mysterious AI attached.
- Blood Contract: A bounty system to functionally create PvP quests for other players.
- Civilization Control: A similar, but seemingly less far-reaching UI for managing territory and assets in Frontier, with a focus on usage permission for space structures like gates or autoturrets.
Two of the secondary category winners also caught my eye: The “Most Creative” winner, Bazaar, renders Frontier’s marketplace menu as a playable social space, a 2D, sprite-based, isometric environment resembling the OG Diablos or Baldur’s Gates. The “Weirdest Idea” is also pretty sick: Shadow Broker Intel, a marketplace specifically devoted to trading actionable information about other players’ activities.
EVE Frontier remains in a long early access state, and if you’d like to participate in its grand MMO modding experiment, CCP offers “Founder Access” on its website.

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