A mobile game using Donald Trump’s licensed name and image will reward players with TRUMP meme coin tokens when it launches later this month, despite having no official connection to the former president or his businesses.
Trump Billionaires Club, developed by Wyoming-based Freedom45Games LLC, markets itself as a 3D board game where players climb a “billionaire ladder” and earn cryptocurrency rewards through Open Loot, a web3 gaming platform. The company claims it holds a license to use Trump’s name but insists the game “has nothing to do with any political campaign.”
The Trump Billionaires Club launch
The Trump Billionaires Club is marketed as “the first and only Trump mobile game for true Trump fans,” according to its official website. Designed as a 3D board-style experience, players climb a so-called “billionaire ladder,” advancing based on dice rolls, luck, and strategic choices.
The Trump Billionaires Club branding is deployed throughout gameplay, rewards, and user engagement, making it a central identity for the product.
The title will distribute TRUMP token rewards through Open Loot, a web3 gaming platform co-founded by Decentraland’s Ari Meilich, marking one of the most visible collaborations involving the TRUMP meme coin to date. The game will support both crypto and non-crypto modes, with the team stating that mobile and web players do not need a wallet to get started.
While details on exactly how players earn TRUMP tokens remain unclear, the allure of these rewards has already amplified discussion across crypto communities, where the Trump Billionaires Club trend has been repeatedly referenced as a potential catalyst for renewed TRUMP token activity.
Licensing questions and distancing from Trump
The developer, Freedom45Games LLC, says it holds a license to use Trump’s name but insists the former president and his businesses had no involvement in the game’s creation.
“This game is not affiliated with any cryptocurrency offering, is not political, and has nothing to do with any political campaign,” the company states.
Another line on the project’s website asserts that users can “turn progress into ownership” by unlocking digital collectibles as they advance through the Trump Billionaires Club levels.
Yet the terms and conditions clarify that all content remains the intellectual property of Freedom45Games and that players gain no actual ownership rights — an important point for policy makers monitoring digital asset compliance.
Freedom45Games was formed last year in Wyoming and shares registered agents with several Trump-licensed ventures, including 45Footwear and Celebration Cards LLC, a company tied to the TRUMP meme coin ecosystem.
However, there is no confirmation that these entities share ownership, and the creators of the Trump Billionaires Club have not publicly disclosed their principals.
Earlier investigations by U.S. lawmakers into unrelated Trump-branded companies, including Fight Fight Fight LLC, have fueled speculation about political or financial ties behind the broader TRUMP token environment. For now, no such link has been identified for the Trump Billionaires Club.
A growing trend in Trump-themed web3 games
The Trump Billionaires Club is not the first game built around the Trump brand. In January, “Trump’s Empire,” an unofficial Telegram tap-to-earn game, went viral by letting players build an in-app business empire and eventually launch their own meme coin.
The Trump Billionaires Club appears to be following a similar path — combining Trump-inspired aesthetics with blockchain incentives — but with more formal licensing and broader gameplay.
Despite the attention, TRUMP token markets have shown little immediate reaction. The Solana-based meme coin experienced major volatility earlier in the year before settling at levels far below its peak. Crypto traders are now watching whether the Trump Billionaires Club — referenced repeatedly across web3 forums — can stimulate fresh demand.
For regulators and policy makers, the Trump Billionaires Club may raise recurring concerns about celebrity licensing, token economics, and consumer protection, especially as digital collectibles and game-based monetization continue to test existing rules.
As the release draws near, both fans and critics of the Trump Billionaires Club anticipate that the intersection of branding, blockchain, and entertainment will continue to drive debate — particularly when political figures or their likenesses are involved.