►
From YouTube: Universe Project Call #7
Description
Website: https://universe.xyz/
Project Management Hub: https://github.com/UniverseXYZ/xyzDAO-PM
Agenda: https://github.com/UniverseXYZ/xyzDAO-PM/issues/14
Notes: https://github.com/UniverseXYZ/xyzDAO-PM/pull/16/commits/d4884225555d62a41c891badc846397557440b9b
Twitter: https://twitter.com/universe_xyz
Discord: https://discord.gg/NFU
A
A
This
is
the
first
call
since
the
polymorphs
have
launched,
and
I
want
to
say
I
don't
think
it
could
have
been
more
successful.
I
think
it
blew
away
all
of
our
expectations
and
we
just
wanted
to
you
know
say
thank
you
to
the
community.
We
couldn't
have
done
it
without
you
guys,
and
you
know
the
months
of
support
and
you
guys
waiting
for
us
to
come
back
around
and
finally
drop
some
nfts.
A
The
support
was
overwhelming.
We
like
that,
but
we
just
want
to
say
thank
you
to
everyone,
and
we
appreciate
everyone
and
we're
not
going
to
stop
we're
going
to
keep
building
and
just
congrats
to
the
whole
team.
Four
months
of
working.
It
was
finally
good
to
see
the
fruits
of
our
labor,
so
just
everyone
definitely
deserves
a
pat
on
the
back
and
we're
ready
for
the
next
one
without
further
ado
I'll.
B
Yeah,
so
I
don't
want
to
like
run
all
calls
in
the
future,
just
from
the
perspective
of
like
slowly
rolling
this
out
as
a
community
project,
and
the
bigger
thing
that
I
want
to
make
sure
is
that,
like
it's
super
clear
to
the
community
that
I'm
not
like
taking
credit
for
everything
that
like
happened
on
all
of
these
like
twitter
spaces
and
even
in
in
the
discords
like
a
lot
of
the
stuff
that
we're
rolling
out,
is
very
much.
Like
collectively
decided.
B
It's
been
like
months
of
work
like
even
some
of
the
stuff
we're
talking
about
with
the
airdrops
when,
when
some
of
the
fud
was
essentially
coming
in-
and
I
mean
like
it
was
like
days
of
battling
it
like
I'm
gonna
jump
in
and
stick
up
for
the
team.
So
I
was
like
the
most
publicly
like
outspoken,
but
I
don't
want
people
to
think
that,
like
this
stuff
is
like
singularly
being
pushed
forward
by
me
like
pretty
much
everyone
on
the
call
like
on
top
of
people
that
don't
even
join.
B
This
call
like
a
lot
of
the
designers.
A
lot
of
like
the
front
end
developers
like
even
george
who's,
ziko's
counterpart,
like
isn't
even
on
this
call
and
he's
the
one
that
brought
like
polly
polymorphs
to
the
to
the
forefront.
B
B
So
since
we're
like
on
the
like
kind
of
public
call
and
people
consume
information
in
different
ways,
the
biggest
like
piece
of
pushback
about
nfts
when
we
first
dropped,
is
that
I
think
that
people
had
essentially
like
a
set
way
of
how
they
like
measured
rarity
for
projects
how
they
essentially
went
about
kind
of
like
ranking
their
nfts
or
deciding
which
ones
they
thought
were
cool.
B
And
when
we
launched
polymorphs.
I
think
I
said
that,
like
at
the
time
it
was
the
most
technologically
advanced
nft
to
ever
drop
and
I
think
that
it
threw
a
lot
of
the
nft
community
off
and
like
how
some
of
the
dynamics
work,
and
I,
in
my
opinion,
I
think
that
that's
really
cool
and
special.
I
think
that
there's
been
some
really
innovative,
nfts
that
have
rolled
out
over
the
past
couple
years
that
I
followed
like.
I
was
very,
very
involved
in,
like
the
punk
community
and
used
to
own.
B
Yes,
the
team
did
it,
but
there
also
was
like
self-discovery
within
the
community,
like
all
the
rarity
tools
and
like
a
lot
of
those
things
were
not
like
established
by
the
larva
labs
team
like
at
the
onset
essentially,
and
so
I
think
that
my
favorite
thing
about
about
polymorphs
is
that
this
isn't
going
to
be
something
that
like
evolves
in
a
day
like
we
drop
something
completely
different
than
than
what
originally
existed.
B
And
it's
not
just
going
to
be
us,
it's
going
to
be
the
community
and
also
like
usage
and
like
preference
of
these
products
that
actually
makes
people
you
know
prefer
one
over
another.
Essentially,
and
so
I
think
that
if
you
look
at
like
kind
of
the
progression
of
what
I
would
call
like,
technologically
added
nfts,
you
have
like
punks
that
introduced
like
a
lot
to
the
ecosystem,
that
they'll
always
kind
of
be
the
bitcoin
of
nfts.
B
I
I
think
they're
amazing,
and
then
you
have
like
jimmy,
who
launched
avastar's
that
really
push
for,
like
on-chain
metadata,
the
way
that
they
actually
like
minted
those
nfts
with
like
layered
svgs,
and
you
would
scroll
and
scroll
and
scroll
and
scroll
to
find
them.
I
actually
want
to
say
that
in
the
article
that
I
wrote
that
the
avastar's
they're
continuing
to
get
minute,
I
basically
said
that
you
can
kind
of
like
game
how,
like
the
scrolling
function,
works
now
that
wasn't
like
a
knock
on
the
avastar's
project.
B
That
was
actually
kind
of
me
tipping.
My
hat
to
it
was
a
an
extremely
cool
launch
and
I
don't
think
anybody
could
do
it
again,
because
the
bots
like
have
already
started
to
try
to
like
game
those
and
put
them
on
the
avastar's
market.
B
But
that's
just
an
example
of
like
an
extension
to
what
like
crypto
punks
did
right
and
then
you
have
like
hash
masks
that
were
really
the
first
ones
that
maybe
even
started
what
they
did.
That
was
cool.
Is
they
paired
the
nft
with
an
erc20
that
let
you
kind
of
customize
it
and
change
your
name
about
it,
and
they
put
a
lot
of
effort
into
that
drop.
And
then
I
would
say,
board
ape
yacht
club
was
probably,
in
my
opinion.
The
first
group
that
really
got
it
right
and
was
like.
B
And
so,
if
you
kind
of
look
at
how
all
of
these
things
rolled
out,
you
then
start
seeing
a
lot
of
other
projects
that
are
that
are
emulating
some
of
the
aspects
of
like
the
past
and
the
old
projects.
B
But
if
they
weren't
they
weren't
from
a
technology
perspective,
some
of
the
art
is
amazing,
and
I
love
a
lot
of
these
nfts
from
a
technology
perspective.
B
They
weren't
quite
doing
what
we
did
where
we
completely
changed
the
the
like
characteristics
of
how
these
things
work,
and
so
I
think
that
that
threw
a
lot
of
people
off
that,
especially
like
collectors
that
had
gotten
into
a
groove
of
like
this
is
how
we
do
x,
y
and
z.
This
is
how
we
do
this,
and
so
naturally
there
was
like
some
backlash.
Confusion
like
fun.
That's
what
fud
is.
B
It's
fear,
uncertainty
and
doubt,
and
so
I
think
we
did
a
really
good
job
of
explaining
these
things
and
and
how
they
work.
And
you
I
mean
we
don't
have
to
go
into
too
much
detail
on
this
call.
B
Otherwise,
then
I'll
talk
about
things
at
a
high
level,
but
I'd
also
invite
everybody
to
like
read
the
most
recent
like
medium
article
on
how
these
things
work,
but
essentially
like
some
of
the
terminology
that
I
think
that
has
come
about
has
been
pretty
amazing
like
I
actually
never
thought
that,
like
non-scrambled
or
non-morphed,
nfts
would
be
what
people
wanted.
I
I
personally
almost
saw
those
like
floor
punks,
because
you
have
to
essentially
use
the
nft
morph
it
and
like
scramble
it
in
order
to
get
one
that
actually
looks
better.
B
So
the
way
that,
like
our
nfts
work,
is
more
from
like
a
proof
of
work
perspective
where
you
actually
have
to
utilize
eat,
and
you
actually
have
to
play
around
with
it
and
figure
out
like
what
you
want
and
what
the
outcomes
could
be
in
order
to
actually
have
one
that,
like
looks,
really
really
cool.
But
I
do
understand
the
concept
that,
like
some
of
the
ones
that
look
really
cool
as
virgins
off
the
rip,
you
know
would
actually
be
something
that
people
would
covet.
B
And
I
think
that
that's
similar
to
like
punks,
that's
going
to
be
something
that
people
figure
out
over
time
like
when
they
originally
dropped.
B
B
But
let
me
just
check
down
some
like
points
just
from
the
agenda,
so
I
make
sure
we
go
through
it
all,
but
virgins
are
essentially
like
polymorphs
that
have
never
been
scrambled
and
never
never
been
morphed
and,
like
that's
an
example
of
a
community
driven
thing
in
and
of
itself,
because
we
didn't
make
that
word
up
like
that
actually
came
from
the
community.
I
think
g-money
started,
calling
them
virgins,
and
now
it
is
what
it
is
scrambling
for
those
who
are
kind
of
just
watching
this.
For
the
first
time.
B
One
of
the
things
that's
interesting
about
polymorphs
is
that
you
can
scramble
every
single
like
trait
in
your
polymorph,
so
you
can
basically
take
it
and
you
can
scramble
all
traits
and
attributes,
there's
also
morphing,
which
is
changing
a
single
trait
and
so
scrambling
works
on
a
flat
curve.
It's
essentially
point
zero
one,
each
to
just
reset
your
polymorph
and
reset
the
bonding
curve.
Morphing
works
on
a
bonding
curve,
where
I
think
the
first
scramble
is.
Like
point
or
the
first
morph
is
so
you
want
to
change
like
what's
in.
B
In
your
polymorph's
hand,
you
want
to
change
the
shirt.
That's
like
point,
zero,
two
e,
the
the
next
one,
since
it's
a
bonding
curve,
is
like
up
right.
Like
point
zero.
Four
then
point
zero.
Well,
I
don't
know
the
exact
math
I
mean
we.
We
can
release
all
of
that,
but
essentially
it
becomes
more
and
more
expensive
to
essentially
change
change,
individual
attributes.
B
So
what
that
causes
is,
is
basically
a
game
theory
where
you
have
to
scramble
and
try
to
morph
it
into
a
perfect
polymorph,
and
so
when
you're
looking
at
like
rarity,
it's
not
any
individual.
Trait,
that's
actually
rare
right
like
no.
No
like
helmet
is
more
rare.
No
character
is
more
rare.
B
What,
then
becomes
rare
is
the
pairing
of
traits
so
like
this
is
the
only
like
mariguana
with
like
a
weed
shirt
and
two
bongs
in
their
hand
like
that,
doesn't
even
exist,
yet
that
mariguana
would,
with
a
weed
shirt
in
two
bongs
in
their
hand,
and
I've
talked
to
a
lot
of
people
and
that's
essentially
what
they
want
right.
A
lot.
B
A
lot
of
people,
and
so
if
somebody
essentially
morphs
that,
in
my
opinion,
that
will
probably
be
the
most
coveted
like
polymorph
like
up
to
that
point
in
time,
but
then
people
are
going
to
do
more
and
more
advanced
things.
They're
essentially
like
I
want
to
make
an
ass
like
a
full
monkey
astronaut
with
two
bananas
in
its
hand.
But
another
thing,
that's
really
interesting
is
if
everybody
morphs
to
these
full
sets.
B
You
can
also
morph
to
like
lack
of
sets
right
like
I
know
that
one
of
the
guys
in
our
discord
literally
said
something
that
I
was
thinking
about,
doing
which
was
making
the
diamond
fox
in
their
underwear
with
no
shirt,
no
hat,
no
pants,
no
shoes
with
two
diamonds
in
their
hand
like
so
as
we
play
around
with
it,
you're,
essentially
going
to
be
able
to
make
like
coveted
polymorphs
based
on
individual,
like
trait
pairing,
as
opposed
to
traits
in
and
of
themselves
as
individuals,
and
so
that
is
extremely
game
breaking.
B
But
for
people
to
say,
there's
no
rarity
when
it
comes
to
these
things
is,
is
honestly
just
not
not
looking
at
it
the
same
way
and
another
additional
aspect
of
all
of
this
is
that
we
to
add
to
the
to
the
rarity
components
we
map
this
on
an
entire
genome.
Where
we
can
add
additional
traits
like
we
can
add
the
the
polymorph
having
a
pet.
We
could
add,
I
mean
if
you
essentially
look
at
it
like
they
could
have
earrings.
They
could
have
a
belt
like
bracelets.
B
So
a
lot
of
that
stuff
has
not
actually
even
been
introduced.
It
will
be
decided
by
the
dow
when
we
essentially
introduce
those
types
of
things.
So
what
will
be
interesting
about
that?
Actually
is
that
then,
when
you
scramble,
like
maybe
a
pet,
shows
up
right,
so
the
full
morphs
without
pets
actually
may
end
up
being
the
most
coveted
one
which
may
throw
a
massive
wrench
into
everybody's
opinion.
B
Don't
scramble
the
virgins
because
then,
if
you
wait
on
it,
then
your
net,
it's
going
to
be
harder
to
get
like
a
monkey
in
an
astronaut
suit,
with
two
bananas
without
like
a
dog
for
instance.
So
I
don't
think
anybody
has
this
figured
out
yet
I
think
that
we're
all
figuring
it
out
in
real
time,
but
I
just
want
to
be
like
very
clear
that
there
is
not
not
rarity,
because
rarity
tools
doesn't
know
how
to
calculate
it
or
other
people,
don't
know
how
to
calculate
it.
B
There's
absolutely
rarity
to
these
things
and
then
yeah,
I
think
I
mean
I
went
over
sats
ideas.
Future
development
is
is
very
much
like.
B
We
didn't
announce
any
of
this
when
we
started
it,
I
mean
I'm
not
even
sure
that
we
we
knew
where
all
of
this
was
gonna
go
exactly
when
we
started
it.
So
like
we
didn't
launch
this
with
like
a
dev
road
map
like
I've
seen
other
projects
do
we
we
really
just
wanted
to
see
like
what
the
reception
was
and
and
where
we
could
go
from
there.
But
I
personally
like
loved
this
project
like
a
lot
and
I
didn't
come
up
with
the
idea,
I
didn't
make
the
designs.
B
I
didn't
write
any
of
the
code,
I'm
a
community
member
like
everyone
else,
I
don't
even
get
paid
by
universe
so,
like
I
legitimately
just
want
to
work
on
this,
because
I
think
it's
the
coolest
nft
drop
that
I've
seen
in
a
very,
very,
very,
very,
very
long
time
and
I
think,
there's
a
lot
of
really
cool
stuff.
We
can
do
with
it.
B
So,
at
the
end
of
the
day,
when
we
do
those
like
what
there
was
like
800
each
raised
when
we
sold
them,
there's
there's
also
ongoing
revenue
that
comes
from
morphing
and
from
scrambling.
B
So
I
think
that
it's
like
every
day
that
number
essentially
goes
into
the
dow
and
one
thing
that's
very
different
about
the
polymorph
drop
as
opposed
to
and
when
I
say
other
nfts,
I'm
not
talking
about
every
single
one,
I'm
just
talking
about
in
general
that
that
money
didn't
like
go
back
to
us.
It
went
into
a
dow
that
our
community
essentially
runs,
and
we
all
have
to
vote
on
this
together.
B
So
like
we
can't
like
rug
or
take
that
money
out
of
it,
and
I
think
that's
empowering
in
and
of
itself,
but
the
point
there
is
like
we
didn't
go
into
this
with
with
a
predetermined
road
map.
It's
it's
honestly
up
to
the
dow
and
the
community
on
on
what
we
ongoingly
build.
I
mean
we
do
have
an
internal
dev
team.
B
We
are
adding
resources
and
designers
that
can
work
on
this,
so
I
mean
the
community
will
have
to
work
with
us,
but
I
think
that
a
lot
of
this
will
start
getting
getting
cranked
out
in
what's
called
a
dow
first
format,
and
so
one
of
the
the
I
guess
the
final
thing
about
polymorphs
before
I
stop
is.
B
I
think
that
the
polymorph
community,
when
we
launched
this,
I
thought
that
the
xyz
community
was
going
to
be
the
main
people
that
bought
polymorphs.
I
think
that
in
the
large
part
they
were,
they
were
probably
a
little
bit
over
50
percent,
but
there
were
a
lot
of
people
that
didn't
know
what
universe
xyz.
What
a
dow
was
how
any
of
this
worked,
and
so
they
got
very,
very
active
in
our
community
and
we
decided
to
add
them
to
the
airdrop.
B
B
And
so
dragos
was
gonna
be
on
this
call,
but
he
he
had
to
take
some
time
off
and
I
can
discuss
the
the
airdrop
dynamics.
But
then
I
I
want
ryan
to
actually
discuss
how,
like
the
dr
opium
thing
works.
So
I'm
not
the
only
one
talking
on
this
call,
but
I
did
go
through
with
the
community
like
an
announcement,
because
there
was
some
backlash
not
from
the
kind
of
nft
and
polymorph
community.
B
But
there
was
some
backlash
from
the
discord
community
that
felt
like
it
was
essentially
diluting
their
airdrop
and
so
the
the
reason
that
we
decided
to
do
that
was
that
we
favor
community
and
we
want
to
build
a
community,
and
I
think
we
built
an
amazing
community.
B
B
So
when
I
talk
about
community,
I
almost
talk
about
it
in
tears,
where
there's
people
that
truly
stuck
around
and
stuck
with
us
and
they
were
added
to
what's
called
a
expanded
airdrop,
which
was
supposed
to
be
an
airdrop,
but
they
just
went
into
vesting
contracts
that
essentially
was
called
community
discretionary.
So
like
it
was
supposed
to
be
like
30
people.
Originally,
it
ended
up
being
like
more
than
100
people
like,
and
then
even
some
of
them
were
added
as
contributors.
B
Some
of
them
actually
came
in
and
put
money
in
seed,
so
I
think
that
we
had
like
170
something
vesting
contracts
that
were
set
up
and,
like
those
were,
the
people
that
we
thought
helped
the
most
to
get
us
back
to
where
we
needed
to
be
to
be
a
legitimate
project.
And
so
another
thing
was
we
had
like
3
000
people
in
the
discord.
We
thought
that
maybe
like
8000
or
2000
of
those
people
would
have
probably
claimed
the
airdrop.
B
It
ended
up
being
that,
like
300
people
claimed
the
airdrop,
and
so
in
the
original
dynamics
of
what
we
talked
about,
that
the
airdrop
was
going
to
go
on
for
20
weeks.
It
actually
poses
a
security
risk
to
the
project
that
there's
people
who
kind
of
came
in
for
non-fungible
pepe,
airdrop
left
the
discord
came
back
three
months
later
and
you
can
even
see
it
in
their
profiles
and
then
they
join
the
new
airdrop
essentially
well,
and
but
they
didn't
bid
on
an
nfp.
B
They
they
didn't
stick
around
and
build
with
us
through
the
trenches
and
fight
off
fight
with
300
and
therma.
I
don't
even
know
how
to
say
that
word
and
then
they
didn't
even
go
and
buy
a
polymorph
right
so
like
those
are
the
people
that
probably
feel
the
most
shafted
but
like
from
my
perspective,
those
are
the
people
that
haven't
support.
They've
supported
us,
the
least
of
anyone
on
that
airdrop
list.
B
Many
tokens
on
that
short
of
a
time
frame
would
actually
put
those
people
in
control
of
the
four
and
a
half
million
dollars
we
raised
in
the
seed
round
and
the
probably
two
million
dollars
that
polymorphs
is
essentially
put
into
the
treasury,
and
so
we
have
a
expectation
to
the
rest
of
the
community
to
all
of
the
seed
investors,
the
people
that
bought
polymorphs
to
the
to
the
people
that
put
up
four
and
a
half
million
dollars
to
make
sure
that
that
doesn't
get
rugged
and
pulled.
Even
though
that
wouldn't
be
our
intention.
B
B
We
did
it
for
the
long
term
security
of
the
protocol,
and
I
think
that
most
of
the
people
that
have
been
building
with
us
along
this
way
understood
why
we
did
it
most
of
the
backlash
was
either
from
people
that
were
following
loosely
or
they're
just
in
our
discord,
because
they
want
to
airdrop
and
we're
not
building
for
those
people
we're
building
for
people
that
want
to
build
with
us
for
a
long
long
long
time,
and
that
was
why
we
changed
things.
The
way
that
we
did,
I
mean
it
wasn't
an
impulsive
decision.
B
B
C
C
But,
as
you
claim
the
tokens,
you
forfeit
actually
get
redistributed
to
everybody
else's
pool.
So
if
I
claim
a
thousand
tokens
on
day
one
the
next
person
immediately
after
we
could
claim
say
a
thousand
and
twenty
and
the
next
person
could
claim
a
thousand
and
sixty
and
so
forth.
But,
additionally,
you
don't
just
get
tokens
from
other
people
forfeiting
your
token
allocation
grows
linearly
over
time.
So,
if
you're
getting
one
percent
on
the
first
day,
maybe
you
get
like
a
percent
and
a
half
on
the
next
day
and
so
forth
across
these
hundred
weeks.
C
So
so
this
way,
basically
there's
that
really
cool
dynamic,
where
anyone
who
kind
of
doesn't
really
care
too
much
about
xyz,
just
kind
of
wants
to
get
their
tokens
out
and
dump
them
gets
a
very
small
allocation
and
is
able
to
do
that
very
early
on
and
those
who
kind
of
want
to
support
the
project
and
eventually
vote
in
the
dow
and
are
in
there
for
the
long
haul
get
the
the
bulk
of
the
rewards.
C
If
you'd
like,
I
can
also
cover
some
auctions
and
mint
things
updates
as
well
yeah.
That
would
help
so
auction
and
minting
is
going
to
be
the
next
product
that
we're
releasing.
I
can't
give
too
much
details
on
what
exactly
these
auctions
are
going
to
look
like,
but
we
are
really
excited
because
they're
really
innovative
and
they
they're
very
different
than
a
lot
of
the
stuff
we've
seen
before.
We
had
a
major
overhaul
actually
of
the
auctions
over
the
last
few
weeks,
and
this
has
kind
of
completed
a
first
round
of
audits.
C
It's
ready
to
kind
of
make
some
changes
that
we've
been
working
on
to
get
these,
get
it
ready
for
the
next
round
of
audits.
We've
also
had
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
ui
overhauls
to
make
it
as
as
seamless
as
possible
and
as
easy
to
both
set
up
an
auction
and
meet
the
nfts
that
go
into
that
and
also
to
actually
bid
on
it
and
participate
in
the
auctions
themselves.
C
C
We're
gonna
have
different
options,
maybe
not
originally
at
launch,
but
we
will
support
multiple
different
erc721
types
and
you'll
be
able
to
choose
which
type
of
token
you
want
to
deploy
and
we'll
give
details
about
which
one
is
best
for
what
use
cases
and
kind
of.
Let
you
make
an
informed
decision
on
that,
but
it's
going
to
be
really
extensible
and
it's
going
to
it's
going
to
cover
a
lot
of
ground
that
places
like
openc
and
other
platforms.
Just
just
aren't
able
to
offer
yet
and
that's
going
to
be
really
exciting.
A
I
think
a
lot
of
artists
have
been
waiting
for
this
particular
tool
that
ryan's
talking
about
you,
the
ability
to
have
your
own,
you
know
minting
contract.
I
think
it
eliminates
a
lot
of
the
issues
and
it
fixes
a
lot
of
the
needs
of
artists
in
the
current
space
right
now.
So
I
think
this
is
something
that
a
lot
of
artists
have
been
waiting
for.
So
the
good
news
is
that
it's
almost
ready.
A
We
just
need
a
little
bit
more
time.
I
think
one
thing
I
would
just
touch
up
on.
I'm
not
sure
if
tyler
talked
about
is
the
actual,
like
breakdown
of
the
new
like
airdrops.
Originally
it
was,
I
think
it
was
six
percent
for
the
discord
community
and
that
ended
up
getting
split
in
half.
So
it's
three
percent
for
the
discord
community
and
it's
three
percent,
the
polymorph
community
and
then
two
percent
for
the
pepes.
A
The
one
thing
that
I
would
just
you
know
point
out
here
is,
although
you
know
anyone
in
the
discord
that
did
end
up
like
that,
was
part
of
that
discord.
Airdrop,
I
ended
up
buying
polymorph,
you
still
end
up
getting.
You
know
both
airdrops.
A
It
may
be
a
little
bit
less
but
like
how
ryan
spoke
about.
You
know
the
airdrop
game
theory,
depending
on
how
you
play
the
game.
This
definitely
can
affect
your
allocation
and
what
you
end
up
with.
A
So
that
is,
you
know
one
thing
to
definitely
take
away
from
this
and
how
you
gain
this
is
definitely
is
going
to
affect
your
outcome,
no
matter
what
air
drop
you're
in,
because
all
of
them
are
pooled
together
so
like
if
one
of
all
the
pepe
bitters,
you
know
leave
early,
that
allocation
gets
reverted
over
to
the
other,
the
other
people
still
in
the
airdrop,
because
those
tokens
get
forfeited.
A
When
you
claim
early
you,
basically,
you
know
give
up
whatever
you
don't
have
to
claim
yet,
but
like
how
ryan
was
saying,
you
earn
more
basically
every
day,
so
it
kind
of
gets
to
the
point
where
everyone
will
have
their
point,
where
they
think
it's
either
worth
them
to
claim
or
they'll
stay
in
and
think
that
it's
worth
staying
in.
So
really
it's.
It's
really
interesting
because
everyone
will
act
differently
and
we
saw
this
in
the
dr
opium
airdrop
is
nobody
acts
the
same
and
that's
kind
of
why
it's
so
cool.
B
So,
like
I
mean
I,
I
think
the
most
likely
people
to
actually
dump
their
tokens
are
the
ones
that
signed
up
for
the
airdrop
left.
The
next
day
came
back,
signed
up
for
the
airdrop
and
then
got
active.
B
I
mean
that's,
not
the
call
out
anyone
in
particular,
because
some
of
the
I
actually
called
out
people
who
have
been
active
like
lucky,
luke
and
he's
like
he's
been
extremely
active
so
like
I
just
don't
want
anybody
to
think
that
it
was
specifically
who
I
responded
to,
because
I
responded
to
people
who
I
actually
knew
were
good.
B
But
my
point
is:
if,
if
the
discord
community
is
right
and
the
polymorphs
community
does
have
weak
hands
and
your
plan
was
to
hold
long
and
support
the
project,
then
that's
actually
better
for
you
right.
So
I
would
just
like
view
it
as
if
you
planned
on
getting
something
short
term
from
us
and
not
sticking
with
us
long
term.
I
don't
really
care
if
your
plan
was
sticking
with
us
long
term,
then
you're
going
to
be
rewarded
and
that's
really
the
way
that
that
you
should
look
at
it.
A
And
another
thing:
I
think
that
we
really
want
to
make
clear
is
one
thing
that
we
really
didn't
foresee
and
tyler
mentioned
earlier
on.
This
call
like
we
really
had
thought
most
of
people
buying.
These
nfts
were
going
to
be
the
xyz
community
and
that
really
threw
us
a
curveball
and
we
were
a
little
blown
away
when
this
thing
sold
out
in
30
minutes,
and
we
really
had
to
figure.
We
figured
out
that
it
was
not
the
xyz
community
that
bought
the
majority
of
them
and.
B
We
was
that's
one
thing.
I'd
say
we
haven't
done
that
full
analysis,
but
it
doesn't
include
the
people
that
were
staking
in
the
dow.
It
doesn't
include
people
that
haven't
claimed
from
their
vesting
contracts
because
they
may
be
busy
like
some
of
like
the
really
big
like
whales.
It
doesn't
include
people
that
are
in
pool
2
and
providing
liquidity
for
the
the
good
of
the
project.
B
So
I
think
when
you
take
into
all
of
those
into
account
all
of
those
factors,
I
would
say
that
it
is
not
the
way
that
it
looks
if
you
just
run
a
simple
wallet
script
on
etherscan,
but
with
that
said,
let's
say
it's
somewhere
in
the
40
to
60
percent
range.
We
that
we
still
very
much
grew
our
community
with
new
people
that
are
excited
about
universe
and
xyz,
that
weren't
there
before
and
they're.
B
That's
not
what
a
dao
is
supposed
to
be
about
that
like
it's
who
got
in
first,
it's
who
is
coming
in
providing
value
now
and
who
is
helping
and
and
that's
who
that's,
who
we
need
to
take
care
of,
and
the
polymorph
community
is
dope
as
and
I
want
to
put
on
for
them
like
like,
like
we
have
for
the
xyz
community
and
when
the
dow
activates,
then
nobody
has
to
put
on
for
anybody.
We
all
run
this
together
and
and
that's
the
beauty
of
it
right,
so
they
we're
all
the
same.
A
I
think
that's
the
main
thing
to
say
here
is
there:
there
is
no
us
and
them
it's
we're
all
on
the
same
team
and
polymorphs
is
an
xyz
drop
and
it's
always
going
to
be,
and
you
know
we
want
the
polymorph
community
to
be
aligned
and
just
as
you
know,
with
our
long-term
incentives
of
what
we
want
to
do,
and
that's
really
is
empower
artists
and
create
cool
technology
for
the
nft
community
to
explore
and
play
with,
because,
like
tyler
said
on,
one
of
those
twitter
spaces
is
like.
A
A
They
really
think
that
there's
more
to
nfts
that
people
are
doing,
and
that's
one
thing
that
we
really
want
to
explore-
is
just
the
cool
technology
of
connecting
these
custom.
Smart
contracts
to
nfts
and
doing
cool
things
with
them
is
really.
What
we
believe
is
what
the
future
is,
and
you
know
this
is
just
the
start
of
some
really
cool.
You
know
technology
and
we
really
hope
that
people,
you
know,
look
over
our
code
and
go
try
and
figure
out
cool
things
to
do
with
it.
A
We
made
it
open
source
and
we're
going
to
continue
to
make
cool,
open
source
tools
like
this,
and
so
that
people
can
do
drops
like
this,
and
you
know
we
can
all
innovate
this
space
together,
because
you
know
this
was
just
a
framework.
We
would
love
this.
I
mean
we
think
that
people
could
probably
come
up
with
some
really
really
cool
drop,
these
polymorph
contracts.
A
A
B
Just
either
it's,
this
is
a
conglomeration
of
a
lot
of
people
that
are
excited
about
these
about
media,
about
nfts,
about
d5,
about
dows,
like
we've
got
like
the
whole
dmob
squad
that
that
is
is
doing
a
lot
for
barnbridge
and
and
helped
us
find
dev
talent
to
do
a
lot
of
the
back
end,
dow
and
and
yield
farming
and
they'll
be
helping
long
term
on
a
lot
of
the
scaling
infrastructure.
B
We've
got
lyme
chain
who
I
mean
they
came
from
bonbat
and
like
helped,
I
mean
they're,
the
ones
that
brought
polymorph's
idea
to
the
table
and
helped
us
build
it
out.
We've
got
the
whole
proof
system
squad,
which
was
like
my
group
before
barnbridge
that's
doing
cranking
out
a
ton
of
the
design
in
the
ux,
like
ryan,
came
from
non-fungible
pepe
and
like
wanted
to
help
us
build
this
battle,
gaming
stuff
for
it
and
he's
been
a
gym
and
is
basically
running
product.
B
At
this
point,
so,
like
I
mean,
then
we've
got
ally
and
nick
that
are
that
are
helping
across
the
board
so
like
this
is
and
tim
illustrator
I
mean
he's,
obviously
extremely
excited
about
nfts.
He
officially
came
out
and
said
that
he's
been
working
behind
the
scenes
with
us
for
a
while,
because
he's
been
busting
his
ass
on
that
seven
seven
grant
stuff
to
empower
artists
that,
like
all
over
the
world,
essentially
right
he's
been
working
with
like
paris
hilton.
So
this
isn't
like
a
meet
to
nft
project.
B
I
would
actually
say
that
most
of
us
have
been
working
in
decentralized
media
before
most
of
the
a
lot
of
the
nft
communities
even
knew
what
an
nft
was
right
and
that's
just
the
fact
of
the
matter
so
we're
here
for
it
and
we're
excited
to
build
this.
But
it's
definitely
not
just
me
and
troy.
A
Yeah,
it's
a
whole
team
for
sure,
but
we
all
look
up
to
tyler
and
troy
xyz
so
intent.
So
I
think
that's
most
of
everything
we
have.
We
have
some
community
questions
for
I
don't
really
know
what
this
question
is
asking,
but
I
think
it's
asking
if
we
are
going
to
be
able
like
what
tokens
are
we
going
to
be
able
to
use
on
the
auction
place
in
the
marketplace?
A
Short
answer
is
we're
going
to
allow
you
to
almost
use
any
token
on
the
marketplace
and
the
auctions.
I
believe
that
you
there's
a
way
to
add
a
custom
token,
but
you're
definitely
going
to
be
able
to
use
xyz
bond.
You
know
any
of
these
tokens.
You're
farming
with
usdc
will
have
a
bunch
of
the
you
know.
A
Easy
ones
already
available
for
you,
but
you
know
you'll
be
able
to
make
a
bid
in
almost
any
token
is
how
we
kind
of
design
that
and
then
we
have
another
question
about
if
we
are
making
an
activity
chart
for
the
polymorphs
and
scrambling
and
basically
like
a
history,
we
are
working
on
this.
We
just
need
some
time
to
get
this
all
figured
out
and
get
it
pushed
live.
A
Like
tyler
said
we're
going
to
start
allocating
some
resources
to
a
polymorph
team,
and
that's
going
to
consist
of
like
a
few
devs
and
some
artists
to
basically
build
out
ui
and
any
future.
You
know
things
that
the
dow
will
propose
we'll
just
make
sure
that
this
team
is,
you
know
just
so.
We
aren't
like
dividing
all
of
our
team
already,
because
it
already
looks
like
we're
getting
a
ton
of
recommendations
of
things
that
we
need.
A
So
I
think
moving
some
resources
over
to
the
polymorph
team
and
creating
a
polymorph
team
is
kind
of
where
the
team
is
at
right
now
and
we're
working
on
that
right
now.
So,
honestly,
please
ideas
from
the
community.
Let
us
know
we're
we're
thinking
about
future
development
and
stuff
that
we
need
to
do
for
you
guys
to
make
polymorphs
more
fun
and
easier
to
use
for
everyone
and
that
they
have
all
the
information
that
they
need
either
buying
them
or
scrambling
them
or
whatever.
You
may
need
information.
A
The
communities
come
out.
It
looks
like
we
have
a
few
guys
working
on
some
like
rarity
builds
like
how
I
think
there
are
a
few
devs
ryan
was
saying,
is
working
on,
like
rarity
charts
and
trying
to
figure
out
how
to
pull
together
like
a
rarity
tools,
type
thing
from
the
graph,
I'm
not
sure
what
the
progress
is
on
this,
but
we
know
that
we
have
some
of
the
community
members
helping
us
with
this.
One
thing
we
need
to
bring
up
about.
B
It's
we're
still
as
an
entire
industry
figuring
out
like
how
does
someone
raise
their
hand?
How
do
they
come
in
and
help
like?
B
If
you
go
post
a
job
on
upwork,
you
have
all
these
people
that
bid
on
it
and
then
they
like
don't
do
the
job
properly
so
like.
How
do
you
essentially
have
a
framework
that
you
can
like
monitor
all
of
these
things
and
make
sure
they're
getting
done
properly,
and
people
aren't
like
siphoning
off
from
you,
but
then
also
like
how?
How
do
we
let
people
come
in
and
like
try
things
out
and
raise
their
hands
and
like
that's?
B
That's
not
just
us
figuring
that
out,
but
like
that's
the
kind
of
stuff
that
like
gals,
look
like
at
scale,
there's
people
coming
in
helping
with
rarity
tools
they
get
a
grant.
We
we
compensate
them
for
it
and
like
we're
not
there
yet,
but
we're
trying
to
get
there
so
like
shout
out
to
the
people
that
are
doing
that
and
like
if
they
deliver
a
working
product.
I
do
think
that
we
should
like
retroactively,
compensate
them
through
a
grant
for
doing
that.
B
Work
because
we
didn't
have
to,
and
we've
got
other
that
we're
working
on
too
so,
like
that
doesn't
mean
like
we
cannot
handle
how
many
things
are
coming
in
asking
to
work
with
us
right
now.
It's
it's!
It's
a
lot
right,
and
so
I
just
want
everybody
to
know
like
we
want
that.
But
we've
got
to
put
structure
in
place
for
it,
but
people
who
come
in
and
do
stuff
like
that.
You
provide
value
we're
going
to
compensate
you.
A
Yeah,
just
another
comment
is
we
are
working
on
setting
up
bounty
and
grant's
program
for
xyz
me
and
brian
are
going
to
be
working
on
that
over
the
next
week.
So
that's
we're
gonna
get
all
that
set
up
and
probably
get
a
git
coin.
A
Github
and
you'll
probably
see
some
of
that
stuff,
but
I
don't
know
if
we
have
any
bounties
just
yet,
but
if
we
are
setting
it
up
for
things
like
this,
where,
like
teams
are
building
rarity
tools
like
tyler
said
we'll
want
to
make
sure
that
you
guys
get
retroactively
compensated
for
things
like
that.
I
think
that's
everything
for
this
call.
I
would
like
to
shout
out
algae
he's,
doing
he's
doing
a
polymorph
giveaway
on
twitter
right
now.
A
So,
if
anyone's
trying
to
win
a
polymorph,
there's
a
twitter
giveaway
going
around
on
that
right
now
and
algae.
D
If
you
join
our
discord
or
yeah,
if
you
join
our
discord,
you
can
join
our
discord
by
going
to
our
website
and
scrolling
to
the
bottom.
There
will
be
a
link
on
the
bottom
of
our
website
in
one
of
the
channels
we're
doing
this
tweet
chain
and
it's
already
gone
pretty
far,
and
basically
it
starts
on
tyler's
twitter.
D
If
you
want
to
like
go
look
at
it,
but
if
you
go
to
the
end
of
the
tweet
chain,
you
can
like
continue
it
and
we've
basically
taken
over
the
universe,
and
it's
because
we're
a
bunch
of
aliens
invading
the
twitter
space,
but
basically
yeah.
If
you,
if
you
go
on
our
discord,
you
can
get
involved,
it's
a.
What
is
the?
What
is
the
threat
again,
it's
polymorph
alien
follow
right,
yeah
of
alien,
follow.
B
And
and
the
concept
is
at
the
very
end,
it
starts
with
the
dude
named
billy
at
the
very
end,
I'm
gonna
retweet
it
from
the
universe
like
thread
and
put
it
in
our
announcements,
so
that
people
can
basically
just
click
through
and
follow
everyone
with
a
polymorph
avatar
and
all
of
us
can
basically
do
it
and
then
we're
all
just
squad
on
twitter.
So
that's
what
we're
doing
in
the
polymorphs
are
already
taking
over
twitter.
All
I
see
is
polymorphs.
A
Means
unbelievable
ally
has
a
he
has
a
meme
competition
going
on
too
because
of
his
giveaway
and
the
memes
in
that
channel
are
unbelievable.
My
favorite
one
is
the
one
in
anakin
and
it's
like.
Oh,
I
just
got
the
double
the
double
corn
gun
and
pat,
my
goodness.
Oh
so
you're
done
scrambling
now
right.
B
Yo
we
we
did
that
for
barn,
and
we
need
to
keep
that
going
like.
We
need
a
grants.
Bounty
for
the
those
are
the
best
memes
I've
ever
seen
in
my
life
yeah.
So
honestly,
after
alg's
giveaway
will
probably
end
up
figuring
out
where
we're
holding
all
those
memes
there's
an
old
old
repository
in
some
capacity.
So
we
need
to
yes.
D
D
A
A
And
we
have
all
the
old
barn
bridge
memes
too,
but
honestly
we'll
end
up
taking
some
of
those
memes
and
have
our
artists.
A
You
know,
rework
them
and
maybe
put
them
on
some
of
the
merch
and
stuff,
but
honestly
they're,
just
amazing,
but
honestly
what
tyler's
talking
about
is
we
have
a
weekly
media
competition
for
in
the
barnbridge
discord
that
we've
been
doing,
since
I
think
really
like
the
second
or
third
week
of
the
bounty
program
about
starting
that
we
basically
give
away
50
bucks
to
whoever
has
the
the
best
memes
or
like
the
most
engagement,
it
kind
of
depends.
A
Sometimes
I'll
do
engagement,
sometimes
if
a
meme
just
absolutely
blows
it
out
of
the
water.
You
know
that
one
will
win,
but
we're
kind
of
it's
just
a
fun
thing
we
do
and
it
allows
people
to
get
involved,
and
so
after
algie's
giveaway
we'll
go
ahead
and
start
doing
meme
competitions,
weekly
and
the
discord
so
that
everyone
can
like
have
a
chance
to
win
a
little
bit
of
usdc
or
eve.
So
I
think
that's
everything.
So
thank
you.
Everyone
for
joining
us
hit
like
subscribe
share
with
your
friends.
A
Follow
us
on
twitter,
buy
your
mama
polymorph.
I'm
gonna
link
project,
call
on
this
video
and
I'm
gonna
link
the
polymorph
promo.
A
If
you
didn't
watch
it,
please
watch
it
and
share
it,
and
if
you
haven't
gotten
the
polymorph
try
to
get
one
and
join
our
discord
like
ali
said,
there's
a
lot
of
fun
going
on
in
the
discord
and
there's
a
lot
of
fun
stuff
going
on
on
twitter
over
the
next
few
weeks,
so
make
sure
to
follow
us
on
twitter
and
join
the
discord
and
join
the
party.