Imagine getting a daily horoscope that tells you your virtual tattoo studio is running at full power, or that a luxury tax is hitting your digital apartments. That is exactly the kind of content City Holder Official serves up — and it works surprisingly well as a community engagement tool for what is, at its core, a Telegram-native build-to-earn game.
City Holder positions itself as the first Build-to-Earn game on Telegram, and the channel functions as its primary broadcast hub. The posting rhythm is consistent: roughly 3-4 updates per day, cycling through three distinct content types. "New Object" posts introduce freshly unlocked buildings — everything from a Drone Assembly Hangar to an Opera House — each with a short, stylized architectural description that has genuine creative flair. The writing is punchy and specific: "clean spans, test pads, and disciplined lighting" for a hangar, "ceremonial canopy and evening glow" for an opera house. Someone clearly cares about the copy.
The daily "Horoscope" posts are the channel's most inventive feature. A character named Louisa reads tarot cards that correspond to in-game discounts and bonuses — The Sun rising over the industrial zone means factories run cheaper, The Devil reversed means residential prices climb. It is a clever narrative wrapper around what is essentially a daily bonus notification. The "Finish yesterday's combo" reminders round out the loop, nudging players to complete building combinations before the window closes.
The channel also drops themed character collection announcements — "Salt Shift" beach workers, "Route 66" highway drifters — written in a cinematic, almost literary tone that feels out of place in a crypto game channel, in the best possible way. These posts read like micro-fiction pitches rather than NFT drops, which is either a sign of genuine creative ambition or very good marketing instincts.
With over 2.4 million subscribers, City Holder has clearly found an audience in the crowded Telegram GameFi space, riding the same wave that made Hamster Kombat and Notcoin household names in crypto circles. The channel links out to a YouTube channel, an X account, and a community chat, suggesting a reasonably developed ecosystem around the game.
What works: the content is varied enough to avoid feeling robotic, the writing quality is above average for the genre, and the horoscope mechanic adds personality. What is missing: any transparency about tokenomics, earning mechanics, or roadmap updates — the channel is almost entirely flavor content, with zero technical or financial communication visible in recent posts.
If you are already playing City Holder, this channel is essential for tracking daily bonuses and new content drops. If you are evaluating whether to start, the channel will charm you with its atmosphere but tell you almost nothing about whether the game is actually worth your time or money. Approach with curiosity, but do your own research before treating "Build-to-Earn" as a financial proposition.