Web3 Gaming NFTs Now Officially Non-Securities Under US Law

Web3 Gaming NFTs Now Officially Non-Securities Under US Law

Key Points

  • The SEC and CFTC jointly issued a landmark 68-page interpretive release on March 17 establishing a five-category token taxonomy — ending a decade of regulatory uncertainty for Web3 gaming
  • In-game items, skins, weapons, trading cards, and character NFTs are formally classified as “Digital Collectibles” — non-securities exempt from securities registration requirements
  • Staking, airdrops, and mining rewards tied to non-security tokens are also explicitly cleared, removing the primary legal barriers that had forced many Web3 game developers to geo-block US players

On March 17, 2026, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) jointly published Interpretive Release No. 33-11412, which is the most significant regulatory development for the crypto gaming industry in years. The release establishes a formal five-category classification for all digital assets, and its implications for blockchain game developers and players operating in the United States are substantial.

The Five Categories & Where Gaming Tokens Land

The framework divides all crypto assets into Digital Commodities, Digital Collectibles, Digital Tools, Stablecoins, and Digital Securities. Three of the five categories are – Digital Commodities, Digital Collectibles, and Digital Tools which are expressly classified as non-securities under U.S. law.

For Web3 gaming, the most important category is Digital Collectibles. The SEC formally defines these as crypto assets designed to be collected or used, explicitly naming in-game items, trading cards, skins, weapons, and character NFTs within this classification. Crucially, a Digital Collectible only qualifies as a non-security if it is marketed without a reasonable expectation of profit derived from the efforts of others, which means that developers cannot simultaneously pitch their game’s NFTs as investment products and retain non-security status.

The release also names 18 major cryptocurrencies as Digital Commodities including Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and XRP, confirming they fall under CFTC oversight rather than SEC enforcement. Collectively these 18 tokens represent approximately $1.7 trillion in market capitalisation, roughly 72% of the total crypto market.

What Changes for Web3 Game Developers

Prior to this ruling, Web3 game studios operating in or targeting the U.S. market faced significant legal uncertainty. Many geo-blocked American players entirely to avoid regulatory exposure. The new framework removes that pressure for studios whose in-game assets qualify as Digital Collectibles or whose native tokens qualify as Digital Commodities.

Staking rewards, airdrops, and mining rewards tied to non-security tokens are now explicitly cleared as non-securities transactions and are now recognised as payments for services rather than investment activity. This matters directly for play-to-earn mechanics that reward players with tokens for in-game activity, a model that previously sat in a legal grey zone.

One caveat the SEC preserved: fractionalized NFTs may still constitute securities where buyers reasonably expect profits from the developer’s ongoing efforts. Studios splitting ownership of premium in-game assets should take note.

The Broader Shift in the Market

The release follows SEC Chairman Paul Atkins’ “Project Crypto” initiative, which launched as a joint SEC-CFTC effort in January 2026 after years of the Gensler-era enforcement-first approach. Unlike prior staff guidance, this interpretive release is binding on both agencies and it cannot be quietly walked back by a future staff memo.

Legal analysts have noted that the framework does not eliminate the need for a formal CLARITY Act from Congress, which would codify the taxonomy into statute and make it resistant to future administration changes. For now, however, the interpretive release gives Web3 gaming developers in the U.S. the clearest operating framework they have ever had.

Also read: Zcash Price Soars 4%, Monero Follows But Faces Correction

 

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Abhijay Singh Rawat
Written by Abhijay Singh Rawat
A lifelong gamer with a decade of experience in titles ranging from Mario to Baldur’s Gate, Abhijay has always had an eye for the next big shift in tech. At CryptoNewz, he explores the intersection of gaming, finance, and the future of the web. After hours, he puts down the whitepapers and picks up his phone to climb the ranks in MLBB.