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Nifty News: Porsche ends ‘low effort’ NFT mint early, Oreo dunks into the Metaverse and more

Porsche’s first foray into NFTs appears to have flopped after recording underwhelming sales and was heavily criticized by the community.

Porsche criticized for 'low effort' NFTs, ends mint early

Car manufacturer Porsche had to cut short a nonfungible token (NFT) mint of its famous white 911 model only two days after the public mint started, saying its “holders have spoken.”

The Jan. 23 launch was seen by some as a huge flop for Porsche with just 2,040 of the 7,500 NFTs available having been sold at the time of writing.

The mint was widely criticized by the crypto community for being “low effort,” “tone deaf” and overpriced. The price of the NFTs were set at 0.911 Ether (ETH) ($1,417).

Sales on secondary markets have been undercutting the live mint, with some selling for as little as 0.86 ETH.

After announcing it would cut the supply, Porsche clarified that minting would still be open until 11am UTC on Jan. 25. The collection recorded a surge of FOMO buying which temporarily drove up the floor price.

Get Stuf’d: Oreo launches a Metaverse…and a really big cookie

Cookie company Oreo launched its own Metaverse, the OREOVERSE, an interactive digital world where cookie lovers can play cookie-themed games and enter into a sweepstake.

The OREOVERSE is on desktop, mobile and in Meta’s Horizon Worlds, where users with a Meta Quest headset can enter the Metaverse and experience it in virtual reality (VR).

A screenshot from the web-based version of Oreo’s new metaverse. Source: OREOVERSE

Oreo enlisted the services of TV personality Martha Stewart along with her gardener and friend Ryan McCallister to endorse the Oreo-inspired digital world.

The grand prize for the sweepstake gives users the chance to win $50,000 amongst a range of smaller prizes.

The Metaverse announcement was paired with the unveiling of its latest limited-edition cookie called the “Most OREO OREO” which has a “Most Stuf” creme center — filled with bits of Oreo.

Nike kicks off NFT marketplace with Air Force 1’s

In its first collection of NFTs on its “.SWOOSH Studio” NFT marketplace, Nike is set to launch a NFT collection influenced by its iconic Air Force 1 sneakers following a community vote.

The Polygon (MATIC)-based NFTs will go live on Jan. 25 according to a Jan. 23 tweet by Jasmine Gao, Nike Virtual Studios’ senior product manager.

Nike announced the upcoming NFT marketplace on Nov. 14 last year, which Nike Virtual Studios general manager Ron Faris claimed would help “onboard the next million” into the “wonderful world of web3 and digital assets.”

It aims to be a community-driven platform for Web3 digital art, with members given the chance to help co-create virtual creations with the global fashion brand through community challenges.

According to the Nov. 14 press release, members who win the challenge will also be able to earn royalties on the virtual product they help create.

Nike also suggested that digital wearables would eventually be usable in games and other “immersive experiences.”

Twitch co-founder's Fractal brings its games to Polygon

The gaming company Fractal will be expanding its F Studio product suite to the Polygon blockchain and is bringing along 30 Polygon gaming partners for the ride.

The partners include games such as Phantom Galaxies, Life Beyond, League of Kingdoms, Blast Royale and Sunflower Land.

Fractal and Polygon launch partners. Source: Polygon Gaming.

Fractal is an NFT gaming marketplace founded by Twitch co-founder Justin Kan and provides a launchpad for new projects as well as facilitating tournaments.

It also boasts a software development kit allowing developers to build in-game marketplaces where players are able to buy and sell NFTs in-game, rather than needing to go through Fractal’s marketplace.

The platform originally started on the Solana (SOL) network, but according to a Jan. 23 report by VentureBeat, Fractal is expanding over to Polygon due to its speed, scalability and ability to accelerate game development with the security of the Ethereum network.

Polygon Gaming will be making a strategic investment in Fractal for an as yet undisclosed amount according to the report, in an effort to deepen the partnership between the two firms.

More Nifty News:

An up-and-coming NFT racing game called PetaRush sold out all the NFTs available through both its whitelist and public sales. The game allows users to integrate some NFT collections from outside the games' ecosystem by pursuing partnerships that allow them to use the IP of other collections.

In a recent interview with Cointelegraph, the co-founder of the blockchain role-playing game Illuvium, Kieran Warwick, suggested casual gamers are “critical” to the success of blockchain games that utilize NFTs. Animoca Brands Chairman Yat Sui echoed the sentiment, claiming that all it would take is one good game to kick-start a blockchain gaming boom.

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Twitch co-founder raises $24M for Web3 gaming firm Metatheory

The funding round led by Web3-focused venture capital firms will be used for upcoming nonfungible tokens, comics and a play-to-earn game slated for late 2022.

Web3 gaming and entertainment company Metatheory founded by Twitch co-founder Kevin Lin has raised $24 million in a Series A funding round on Monday.

The round was led by crypto capital venture firm Andreessen Horowitz (a16z), with participation from Pantera Capital, the venture arm of the FTX cryptocurrency exchange, FTX Ventures, and other venture firms, according to the announcement.

Metatheory was launched in November 2021 around one year after Lin left Twitch, where he wrote in a Medium article at the time that he was creating the gaming company and also a blockchain game called DuskBreakers. Lin was quoted in this week’s announcement as saying:

“Building immersive digital experiences has always been a passion of mine, and after stepping away from Twitch to explore what’s next in the industry, I truly believe blockchain will open the door to even more possibilities and have a major impact in the gaming, storytelling and community building space.”

DuskBreakers was released in December 2021 with the art designed by the former lead illustrator at Twitch. The Ethereum-based game implemented a “play-to-mint” model for its first 10,000 nonfungible tokens (NFTs). Those looking to grab an NFT have to play an arcade-type game to validate their entry onto a whitelist.

The DuskBreakers team plans to release comics and animations to continue its storyline, andditional NFTs and content are in the works at Metatheory with a play-to-earn game set for launch in the fourth quarter of 2022.

Related: How blockchain games create entire economies on top of their gameplay: Report

Lin is not the only Twitch co-founder with an interest in gaming NFTs. In December 2021 Justin Kan, another co-founder of Twitch, launched the Fractal NFT marketplace which focuses on blockchain gaming tokens saying that “NFTs are the future of gaming.”

Blockchain gaming is gaining interest from titans of the traditional gaming industry. Most recently, Square Enix revealed in its earnings report that it will expand NFTs into more of its games in 2022.

Microsoft’s CEO said the development of metaverse platforms was a key reason for the $69 billion acquisition of gaming giant Activision Blizzard and Sega is looking to integrate cloud technology NFTs as part of its new Super Game project, which connects its different games to each other.

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Fan Controlled Football raises $40M to expand league with Bored Apes and Gutter Cats

“One of the most powerful things that tokenization does is release the energy of fans into tangible forms of value and meaning, we see this effect in NFTs and also social tokens,” said Animoca Brands co-founder Yat Siu.

Alternative sports organization Fan Controlled Football (FCF) has raised $40 million in Series A funding from crypto and blockchain gaming firms to support the league’s expansion plans, including four new teams and an NFT project.

The FCF was founded in 2017 by Sohrob Farudi, Patrick Dees, Ray Austin and Grant Cohen and hosted its debut season inside a bubble environment in Atlanta amid the pandemic last year. The FCF features an indoor version of American football in a seven vs seven-player format, and the games are streamed live on Twitch.

The unique feature of the league is that the teams are governed by their fans, who have voting rights on anything ranging from player acquisitions, in-game plays, branding and team selection. For the upcoming season, NFTs will play a key role in the voting process for half of the teams.

The $40 million Series A funding round was led by NFT and crypto firms Animoca Brands and Delphi Digital. The funds will be used to expand the league from four to eight teams for the 2022 season, along with launching NFTs called “The Ballerz Collection.”

All four of the new teams are owned by figures tied to NFT projects with the Bored Apes and Gutter Cats teams being the latest to be announced following the unveiling of the Knights of Degen and Team 80KI (co-owned by DJ and NFT proponent Steve Aoki) in October.

The FCF is rolling out 8,888 Ballerz NFT avatars for each new team which fans can snap up to hodl and obtain voting rights for their team. The NFTs will differ in rarity and value, with the more expensive tokens offering greater benefits such as enhanced voting power, exclusive content and game tickets.

Any existing Bored Ape Yacht Club or Gutter Cat NFT hodlers will also receive a 50% discount on Ballerz NFT purchases if they buy tokens corresponding to those teams. The NFTs are slated to drop late this month, and the public minting cost per token will be 0.1776 Ether (ETH) or roughly $580.

Four new FCF teams: fcf.io

Speaking with Cointelegraph , Animoca Brands chairman and co-founder Yat Siu emphasized that fan tokens can enable fans to directly participate in their favorite sports:

“One of the most powerful things that tokenization does is release the energy of fans into tangible forms of value and meaning, we see this effect in NFTs and also social tokens.”

“Fan Controlled Football is an evolution where the game is in the hands of the fan from the get-go and introducing blockchain technology will give it deeper meaning and purpose for all the fans that are playing FCF,” he added.

Related: 3x NBA champion Andre Iguodala becomes the latest athlete to receive salary in crypto

In an interview with Forbes on Jan. 12, FCF co-founder Farudi stated that the organization is “experimenting” with its format and will continue to do so to find out what works best for the fans and the league.

“We don’t know exactly what’s going to work and what’s not going to work. But we don’t have a player’s union. We don’t have 30 owners around the table telling us no. We have one agenda. Our agenda is to be successful. We’re going to experiment to the nth degree to figure out what works and what fans love,” he said.

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Crypto​.com co-ops with esports host Twitch Rivals for global crypto outreach

The multi-year partnership aims to increase local crypto adoption in the esports landscape across the globe.

Twitch Rivals, an esports tournament host featuring Twitch streamers and pro gamers, has onboarded crypto trading platform Crypto.com as a global marketing and cryptocurrency platform partner.

The multi-year partnership will see Crypto.com as an official partner of Twitch Rivals in the Asia-Pacific region, aiming to increase local crypto adoption in the esports landscape. According to Kris Marszalek, co-founder and CEO of Crypto.com:

“With well-over 1 billion gamers worldwide, fans of gaming and esports are digital natives, for whom cryptocurrency is inevitable.”

The deal also entitles Crypto.com to have category exclusivity, in-stream branded segments, media placement, and activations at Twitch events, starting with Twitch Rivals — a two-day event to be hosted in Las Vegas on Thursday.

In addition, Twitch Rival will feature Crypto.com-branded advertisements on more than 250 broadcasts worldwide. According to a Twitch spokesperson, the partnership with Crypto.com is aimed at driving engagement for tech-savvy users.

Related: Ubisoft will seek to invest in and create blockchain games

Leading game-development company Ubisoft recently expressed interest in building blockchain-centric games. As Cointelegraph reported, Ubisoft CFO Frédérick Duguet highlighted the potential of blockchain technology in the gaming industry:

“Blockchain will enable more play-to-earn that will enable more players to actually earn content, own content, and we think it’s going to grow the industry quite a lot.”

Duguet also said that Ubisoft is working with small-scale blockchain companies to understand the technology’s impact on the gaming industry, “And we want to be one of the key players here.”

Twitch previously added a tipping feature back in December 2019 allowing users to tip streamers with a U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoin called MenaCash. As a part of the deal, viewers can use the MenaPay mobile app to view Twitch streams and tip their favorite players in real-time.

In addition, blockchain-based internet browser Brave also supports crypto tipping on streaming platforms such as Twitch, YouTube and Twitter.

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Cryptocurrency-Trading Hamster Outperforms Bitcoin, S&P 500 Since June

<div>Cryptocurrency-Trading Hamster Outperforms Bitcoin, S&P 500 Since June</div>A hamster that trades cryptocurrencies has been outperforming Bitcoin and the S&P 500 since June. The rodent, called Mr. Goxx, uses a device called the “goxx box,” to give signals and make purchases in front of the live streaming audience that follows him. Mr. Goxx has achieved an impressive current score of +24% and even […]

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A new era of content monetization? Blockchain tech can get you paid

Current content monetization systems are seen as broken, but some blockchain solutions claim to hold the key to solving their issues.

By doing so, they have helped regular people become known celebrities, many of whom now hold more influence than TV networks and print media outlets. The same can be said for music streaming services like Spotify and iTunes, which now allow musicians to skip record label deals and simply upload their songs directly to platforms through services like DistroKid and others.

While these are amazing feats, to say the least, the model still needs to be improved. According to Jack Cheng, co-founder of GazeTV — a blockchain-based social entertainment platform:

“Content creators don’t have many choices until they are famous or have a large following, and even then they can get deplatformed pretty easily. If you think back to the early days of YouTube, the platform did not make money. These days the platform makes money as part of a great data generating engine.”

The top content platforms keep aspiring creators in the dark when it comes to their compensation policies, which leads to frequent video demonetizations and has also led to many creators having their videos removed or being shadowbanned. Some have seen their channels completely deleted or entirely demonetized with no prior warning.

Cheng believes that blockchain technology can help change this while providing better monetization for content creators, telling Cointelegraph: “Having a transparent place for content creators which allows viewers to reward the creators themselves is imperative.”

What exactly is going on?

While creators have a hard time monetizing their content — facing multiple strict rules, frequent demonetizations and generally low revenues — advertising networks are still making millions of dollars by showing ads and collecting users’ data. That data is then, unknowingly and often unwillingly, shared with other third parties to further advertising retargeting. All of this is done without a single reward being shared with the creators of all this value: the content consumer.

Creators are eager to change this. It is already happening with many other industries such as financial services, which has been disrupted by the emergence of decentralized finance, or DeFi. Now, blockchain technology may finally make an impact upon the world of entertainment and bring advertisers and creators closer together, removing the middlemen and allowing all involved parties to be properly compensated. EllioTrades, a crypto YouTuber and co-creator of the Superfarm NFT project, told Cointelegraph:

“Engagement is what matters and the reality is that YouTube and Twitter have unrivaled reach. Until a challenger can adequately provide the tools for creators to build their own brands, there isn’t much alternative to these incumbents. Almost every content creator knows this, so despite occasional censorship on these platforms creators remain steadfast in growing their channels there.”

Incentives through blockchain technology

Several platforms aim to solve the ambiguous monetization policies of various entertainment platforms by leveraging incentives and rewards, empowering creators and audiences to engage with each other and form a community.

For example, on GazeTV, users can support creators with ERC-20 GAZE tokens, based on their preferences and tastes, that can be earned, staked and exchanged. This way, creators can track on the blockchain exactly how they are being compensated. This provides creators with additional options to earn from their content. Cheng told Cointelegraph: “I don’t think it’s a binary choice. You don’t have to leave other platforms, such as YouTube, to be on GazeTV.”

Other such platforms include You42 and AIOZTube, the flagship decentralized application, or DApp, on Aioz Network. These platforms aim to create new ways for content creators to be rewarded fairly, while bringing improvements in other areas like data privacy and ad fraud.

The system is broken?

While it’s easy to simply point fingers at “greedy” corporations such as Spotify or YouTube, it’s important to have a holistic view of all the issues associated with providing audio and video streaming services like the aforementioned ones. Platforms like these seem simple in the eye of the regular user, but they are highly complicated and expensive to operate.

So far, these services have been run on cloud-based servers, which are expensive and can cause problems when it comes to the actual delivery of the content. Issues like slow streaming speeds and low-quality video and frametimes, among others, still plague these services — and blockchain technology cannot solve this completely.

Yes, at its best, blockchain technology can increase incentives by allowing advertisers and creators to interact directly and can remove ad networks as the middleman, but the content delivery issue still remains. Centralized services have their limits, and the few companies that own the servers will always be rewarded.

Blockchain as a game changer?

This is where peer-to-peer content delivery systems come into play. Platforms like Theta and Aioz Network are leveraging both blockchain and P2P file sharing systems to create a fully decentralized system that will allow for the creation of potentially paradigm-shifting DApps. This new system will also allow existing services like YouTube, Netflix and others to easily port from expensive centralized servers to decentralized node services.

So, how does it work? Such projects combine blockchain technology and P2P file sharing in a simple way where the P2P systems take care of content delivery. However, this is not new, as projects like BitTorrent have been around for many years. The key change is the use of blockchain technology to properly reward nodes for their work.

As such, nodes serve the primary function of storing and distributing content — performing compute-intensive tasks that require bandwidth, storage and power to deliver content. Erman Tjiputra, CEO and founder of Aioz Network, told Cointelegraph:

“AIOZ Network, a Layer-1 Blockchain-Based Content Delivery Network, incentivizes edge nodes with $AIOZ to share compute resources and internet bandwidth with the security, transparency and accountability of Blockchain. AIOZ Network empowers dApps to have greater streaming quality for viewers via p2p streaming technique and instant cost savings over traditional CDNs.”

The road ahead, DeFi and NFTs

Blockchain technology allows for decentralized monetization to create fairer, more transparent reward systems for creators and also allows advertisers to save millions by cutting out advertising networks. Attention and data can now be negotiated directly with the content consumer, and this can be rewarded for providing it willingly.

It doesn’t end there, however. Nonfungible tokens are the latest craze in the crypto world, and they may hold the key to additional monetization and community-led control for content creators. To put it shortly, NFTs may allow creators to tokenize themselves and allow the community to have a say on how content should be handled.

The internet has opened up doors for entirely new forms of content to emerge, from vlogs to vines, deepfakes, prank videos and much more. Content that is now seen as commonplace and taken for granted was simply impossible a few years ago. Video sharing platforms like YouTube and streaming services like Twitch have changed the game for content creation in an immeasurable way.

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