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400,000 concurrent Banana players – what’s behind the trend

Debora Pape
14.6.2024
Translation: Eva Francis

The mini-game Banana’s been attracting more and more players every week. The gameplay? Clicking a banana. Why would so many people do this?

Non-existent gameplay and hardly any resources required

There isn’t much to say about what the free game’s about. When you launch it, a small window with a banana opens. That’s all. Click the banana once in three hours and you might win a banana skin for your Steam inventory. Yes, you read it right, the item doesn’t even change the skin of the banana in the actual game. It’s just a virtual item for the Steam store. Click the banana once in 18 hours and you have the chance to win a rare Banana skin.

However, the game has to run in the background – which explains the high number of concurrent players. Banana needs hardly any resources – only a processor with a clock frequency of one gigahertz, 128 megabytes of RAM, 30 megabytes of memory and any graphics card.

Speculating on big bucks

So why are so many people playing this sensationally simple game? For one reason only: to be in for a chance to earn money. Real money. So far, more than 70 banana skins have seen the light of day in Steam inventories. Items from the inventory can be sold on the Steam marketplace.

If the seller earned this much by clicking on the banana once, that one click was definitely worth it. According to the description of the Crypticnana, this skin’s limited to 25 drops. Most of the other rare drops are also only available in small quantities. And as always, limited offer increases demand even if the item serves no purpose at all.

But why the heck would anyone buy such a skin for so much money? It’s a classic speculative item. The Steam community knows the skin’s very rare. Anyone who buys it is speculating that it might sell for more later. And the price trend proves this assumption right.

Developers and Steam profit

Header image: Shutterstock/bergamont

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Feels just as comfortable in front of a gaming PC as she does in a hammock in the garden. Likes the Roman Empire, container ships and science fiction books. Focuses mostly on unearthing news stories about IT and smart products.


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