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Open the shop tab in Marvel Snap and the choices stare back at you: a Season Pass for $9.99, a stack of Gold, a bundle priced in a currency you earned by grinding missions. None of that existed in the same shape a decade ago, when “paying for a game” meant one box, one price, one transaction at the counter. The way money moves through games has changed more in the last fifteen years than in the thirty before it, and the methods players use now stretch from a quick card tap to bank wires that look more like a mortgage payment than a microtransaction.
That spread matters because players are spending more than ever. According to Newzoo’s latest market report, global games revenue was on track to reach roughly $197 billion in 2025, with the firm noting that growth is coming from players spending more deeply inside ecosystems they already trust rather than from a flood of new players. People are not just buying games anymore. They are funding accounts, topping up wallets, and paying in steady drips. The plumbing behind those payments has had to keep up.
The first big shift was the premium currency. Instead of charging directly for an item, developers sell an in-game token, then sell goods in that token. Marvel Snap runs on exactly this model, and the site’s own free-to-play breakdown lays out how Gold gets bought with cash, converted into Credits, and spent on variants and missions. The friction is intentional. A player who buys 700 Gold and then spends it feels a step removed from the dollar amount, which makes the next purchase easier.
Premium currencies solved a design problem, but they created a payments problem. Once a game holds a balance on your behalf, the question of how you funded that balance becomes its own decision. Cards were the default for years. They are fast, familiar, and work almost everywhere. They also carry the highest fees and the lowest limits, which is fine for a $4.99 top-up and a real obstacle the moment the numbers get larger.
Where the money gets serious
This is where online gaming splits into tiers based on how much value changes hands. A collectible card game player buying a bundle is moving small, frequent amounts, and cards or stored balances handle that well. Marketplace platforms where players trade skins and digital goods sit a rung higher, with transactions that can run into the hundreds and a real need for buyer protection. Regulated real-money gaming sits higher still, and that is where one of the most established payment methods has quietly become the most useful.
Bank transfers were slow to arrive in gaming because nobody needed them for a $10 purchase. They start to make sense once the amounts climb. A recent Business Examiner bank transfer casinos guide found that direct wires can clear withdrawals of $10,000 to $25,000 or more in a single transaction, while most cards and e-wallets cap out somewhere between $2,500 and $5,000. The same guide pegs typical wire fees at a flat $25 to $45, against the 3 to 9.75 percent that cards often add on top. On a $5,000 movement, a percentage fee turns into hundreds of dollars while a flat wire fee stays put. For anyone shifting a large balance, the math stops being close.
Speed is the trade. Wires settle in days, not seconds, and they ask for a little patience and a verified identity on both ends. That patience buys traceability, higher limits, and a paper trail that lines up cleanly at tax time, none of which a stored card balance offers.
Trust became the real product
The through line across all of this is trust. Players hand over funds before they receive anything, whether that is a card pack, a marketplace skin, or a real-money balance, and they want to know the money is safe and recoverable. That expectation has pushed every payment layer toward the same features: encryption on the transaction, two-factor approval on the account, and a clear route to dispute a charge that went wrong.
It is worth noting how far this has traveled. A Season Pass purchase and a five-figure bank wire sit on opposite ends of the spectrum, but they answer the same question a player asks before tapping confirm: can I trust where this money is going? Games taught a generation of players to keep a balance, move small amounts often, and expect instant access. The payment industry took the hint and built the rest of the ladder, all the way up to rails that can carry serious money without flinching.
The shop tab will keep getting more crowded. The interesting part is not which new option shows up next, but that the humble bank transfer, the least flashy method on the list, ended up being the one that scales.





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