Loading article…
Iranians flock to the “Hamster Kombat” game as rial falls to 580,000 per dollar and food prices jump 50‑70%, highlighting desperation before the June 28
Iran’s “Hamster Kombat” mobile game has surged in daily users, with cab drivers and pedestrians tapping the app in hopes of a quick windfall as the rial slides toward 580,000 per dollar and essential food prices climb up to 70% since last year [1]. The frenzy underscores how soaring inflation and sanctions are pushing ordinary Iranians toward speculative crypto‑linked apps ahead of the June 28 presidential vote.
| At a glance | |
|---|---|
| Rial exchange rate | ~580,000 rials per $1 (up from 32,000 in 2015) |
| Food price inflation | +50 % for fruits/veg, +70 % for meat since last year |
| App usage | Cab drivers, bikers and pedestrians clicking “Hamster Kombat” in Tehran |
| Catalyst | Economic hardship, sanctions and upcoming election [1] |
The “Hamster Kombat” app, accessed via Telegram, works like a clicker game where users repeatedly tap to earn points that they hope will translate into a future cryptocurrency reward, though developers deny any token is currently offered [1]. With the rial’s value eroding dramatically—nearly 580,000 rials now needed for a single US dollar compared with 32,000 in 2015—Iranians are losing confidence in the formal banking system and turning to informal avenues for wealth preservation [1]. Prices of basic goods have surged, with fruit and vegetable costs up 50 % and meat up 70 % over the past year, further squeezing household budgets [1].
Iranian military officials, including Rear Admiral Habibollah Sayyari, have framed the app as part of a Western “soft war” intended to distract voters from the presidential candidates and undermine the theocracy [1]. Religious authorities have also condemned the platform; Ayatollah Nasser Makarem Shirazi, a 97‑year‑old scholar, called Bitcoin “the source of many abuses” and warned against using the game [1]. Despite these warnings, the app’s popularity persists, reflecting a broader trend of crypto curiosity that predates the game but is now amplified by economic distress [3].
The Central Bank of Iran launched a digital rial pilot on June 21, limited to Kish Island, allowing QR‑code payments that bypass traditional interbank settlement [3]. While the pilot aims to modernize payments, it does not address the underlying inflationary pressures that drive users toward speculative apps like “Hamster Kombat.” The coexistence of official digital currency experiments and a burgeoning underground crypto‑gaming scene highlights the fragmented nature of Iran’s financial ecosystem.
The surge in “Hamster Kombat” usage illustrates how severe macro‑economic strain can push citizens toward unregulated digital assets, raising questions about the future interplay between state‑backed digital initiatives and informal crypto‑driven speculation in Iran.
Coverage is mostly measured — 9 of 9 reports stay neutral.
Every Monday — the token unlocks, Fed dates & catalysts set to move crypto and markets this week. So you’re never blindsided.
Free · 3-min read · one-click unsubscribe
AI-assisted synthesis by the TrendWatcher Editorial Desk · sourced from 3 outlets · Jul 4, 2026 · How we report
The game launched in March 2024, with some sources noting an April release for the viral play‑to‑earn version.
Players tap a hamster to earn coins, can upgrade their in‑game exchange, and solve daily cipher puzzles to receive additional rewards.
The game operates on the TON blockchain and plans to issue HMSTR tokens that will be tradable on cryptocurrency exchanges.
According to the developers, the game has rejected all venture‑capital offers, describing such funding as "exit liquidity".
Yes, researchers have identified fake Telegram channels and malicious Android/Windows software that impersonate Hamster Kombat and can install spyware or info‑stealer malware.