►
From YouTube: UNIVERSE XYZ AMA #4
Description
Live AMA with the Universe Founders and the XYZ community recorded on February 16th, 2022
For future AMAs, Join the Universe Discord.
Discord: https://discord.gg/NFU
Website: https://universe.xyz/
Project Management Hub: https://github.com/UniverseXYZ/xyzDAO-PM
Agenda: https://github.com/UniverseXYZ/xyzDAO-PM/issues
Twitter: https://twitter.com/universe_xyz
00:00 We are going to ETHDenver
04:26 Governance Proposals
06:50 Aaron McDonald Love
10:20 Development Update
17:09 Universe Marketplace Launch
30:59 Polymorphs Alpha
39:48 Tyler Drops Hot Fire
47:35 More Polymorphs Talk
51:06 Q & A
1:33:15 Jibaros Project Update
A
B
A
B
A
Okay,
yeah:
we
were
talking
about
that
a
little
bit,
but
we
can
start
if
zach
wants
to
start
recording.
We
can
go
ahead
and
start
recording,
but
yeah
we're
gonna,
be
in
east
denver
tomorrow
at
the
hydra
event,
and
our
founder
tim
kang
is
going
to
be
djing,
which
is
a
special
treat,
but
that
is
not
the
best
part.
We're
actually
going
to
be
on
multiple
panels
and
we'll
be
speaking
about.
A
You
know
the
future
of
nft
platforms,
the
intersection
of
d5
and
nfts,
so
there
will
be
multiple
panels
that
we'll
be
speaking
at
the
first
one
will
be
with
with
tim
me
and
ryan,
and
then
also
with
the
cpo
alexander
from
rarible.
A
We're
super
excited
to
meet
him
and
learn,
and
also
just
like,
be
on
a
panel
with
him.
It's
pretty.
It's
awesome
for
us
to.
You
know
be
on
that.
I'm
super
excited
to
finally
meet
him,
that's
kind
of
why
we
were
just
talking
about
like
wearable
when
everyone
hopped
on
this
call.
We
were
already
kind
of
you
know
diving
into
some
of
these
chats,
but
and
then
I'll
end
up
being
on
another
panel
with
ben
lakov.
A
From
charge,
particles
and
nick
emmons
from
upshaw
hq
and
we'll
be
talking
about
d5
and
nfts,
so
those
videos
are
going
to
be
recorded
and
we'll
be
able
to
share
those
with
everybody,
but
if
you're
in
eth
denver
right
now,
that's
the
hydra
event.
I
believe
there's
still
spots
available
for
like
general
admission,
but
it's
going
to
be
a
pretty
sick
event.
A
It's
going
to
be
at
this
airport
hangar
and
or
it's
like
a
like
a
you
know
like
a
airplane
hanger
and
the
sound
system
is
going
to
be
crazy.
We
have
angel
baby
performing
illustrator.
Tim
kang
is
going
to
be
djing
in
a
lot
of
other
performances,
but
those
are
the
ones
that
we're
excited
about.
Obviously,
but
yeah
we're
gonna
have
a
lot
of
fun.
It's
from
2
p.m.
A
Tomorrow,
denver
time
all
the
way
to
2
a.m,
and
it's
going
to
be
pretty
sick
mango
and
bin
laykov
have
been
helping
us
and
they've
done
an
awesome
job.
Putting
this
event
together,
the
sound
systems
are
gonna,
be
crazy
and
mango
said
if
you're
going
make
sure
to
bring
your
dancing
shoes
because
we're
gonna
be
partying
but
yeah.
That's
the
main
event
for
your
universe.
Tomorrow
we
actually
sponsored
the
event
and
we're
actually
a
sponsor
of
denver,
which
was
really
cool
that
we
were
able
to
do
that.
A
So
we're
really
excited
about
all
this,
and
that's
I'm
I'm
already
out
here
I'll,
be
out
there
tomorrow.
So
if
you
want
to
meet
me
or
you're
going
to
an
event,
just
I'll
have
a
bunch
of
the
universe
gang
with
me
and
we
can
coordinate
and
we
can
figure
something
out,
but
we'll
be
there
till,
I
think
the
20th
or
the
19th.
So
if
anyone
you
know
you're
interested
or
want
to
finally
meet
us,
if
please
reach
out,
don't
be
shy,
we'll
we'll
we'll
reach
back
out
to
you
guys,
yeah!
A
A
Okay,
perfect
man,
so
I'll
just
go
and
I'll
kind
of
go
back
into
some
of
the
proposals
that
are
coming
soon.
Just
because
we
talked
about
this
on
the
last
project.
Call
I
just
wanted
to
re
revisit
it
so
ryan
last
week
brought
up
an
os
migration
tool
and
talked
a
little
bit
about
like
some
things
that
we're
looking
into
for
like
xyz
incentives
on
like
you
know,
people
have
been
looking
about,
looks
rare,
and
how
do
we
do
this
or
how
do
we
incentivize
listings,
or
how
do
we
do
this?
A
So
we
have
a
few
ideas
that
we
have
and
that
we're
going
to
propose
through
a
dow
proposal
and
then
ryan
also
is
going
to
put
in
a
proposal
to
freeze
the
polymorph
base
character
skin,
that's
just
something
that
we
think
may
add
some
rarity
to
and
just
add
a
little
bit
more
game
ability
to
the
polymorphs.
It's
like
the
clown
charles's
have
become
very,
have
become
very
sought
out.
So
I
think
some
people
in
the
community
want
to
try
and
protect
that.
B
B
A
Sorry,
I'm
trying
to
I'm
trying
to
meet
some
people
really
quick,
okay,
yeah,
yeah,
clown
charles,
is
actually
the
most
rare
as
of
right
now.
Clown
charles
has
gotten
quite
the
popularity,
I'm
more
of
a
mariguana
guy
myself,
but
I
love
clown.
Charles
too
clown
charles
actually
made
a
pretty
sick
appearance
at
the
super
bowl.
I
don't
know
if
anyone
saw
that
but
yeah
clown
charles,
had
a
pretty
sweet
seat
and
got
to
watch
aaron
donald
win.
The
super
bowl.
Okay,.
C
A
Time
a
lot
of
the
universe
team
actually
got
to
meet
aaron
shout
out
to
aaron
mcdonald
he's
actually
one
of
the
coolest
human
beings
in
the
world.
If
you
ever
get
the
pleasure
to
meet
him,
definitely
don't
be
afraid
to
just
say
hi
to
him.
He
is
one
of
the
nicest
people
in
the
world.
I
literally
was
leaving
a
party
with
aaron
and
some
people
that
never
have
even
met
aaron
literally
like
asked.
A
If
they
could
take
a
picture
with
aaron,
I
don't
know
if
they
thought
he
was
a
pro
football
player
or
something
because
he's
a
giant
person
but
yeah
I've.
I've
just
never
seen
somebody
like
have
so
many
random
people,
just
love
him
like
these
people
are
like.
Oh,
I
gotta
take
the
picture
with
this
guy
and
then,
like
all
ten
of
these
people
took
a
picture
with
aaron.
A
I
have
the
picture
for
proof
I'll
tweet
it
later,
because
I
just
literally
it
was
just
such
proof
of
why
aaron
is
like
such
an
awesome
guy.
It's
like
everything
like
you.
You
cannot
meet
this
guy
and
not
like
him.
He
is
just
so
awesome,
so
shout
out
to
aaron.
It
was
awesome
meeting
you
and
also
like
meeting
some
of
the
other
people
who
have
been
involved
with
league
down
and
university.
A
It
was
a
lot
of
fun
meeting
everyone
out
in
los
angeles,
and
hopefully
we
meet
even
more
people
out
here
in
east
denver
this
week.
But
tyler
are
you
like
anywhere
close
to
the.
A
B
My
car
do
we
know
if
troy's
on
this
call.
Just
so
I
know
yeah,
he
is
okay,
cool,
because
yeah
troy
is
in
san
juan,
like
another,
just
general
update
of
us,
like
kind
of
putting
on
for
spreading
the
awareness
of
nfts
like
everywhere
is
troy
and
I
live
in
puerto
rico,
and
I
actually
wasn't
able
to
make
it
today,
because
I've
been
on
a
lot
of
calls.
I've
actually
been
up
since
3
a.m,
just
because
of
some
of
the
development
updates.
B
So
troy
went
and
spoke
at
a
panel
today
in
puerto
rico,
where
puerto
rico
is
like
lower
income
than
most
of
the
united
states.
It's
not
like
it's
not
a
state
itself,
and
so
they
don't
get
a
lot
of
the
same
subsidies.
B
And
so
there's
I
mean
it's
not
like
it's
not
like
a
third
world
country
or
anything,
but
it's
definitely
not
like
connecticut
right
and
so
there's
a
lot
of
people
that
want
to
learn
about
opportunities
and
like
things
they
can
do
and
like
web3
a
lot
of
them,
don't
even
know
what
crypto
is
and
so
troy
not
only
is
just
like
a
leader
at
universe
but
like
the
whole
industry
is
a
co-founder
on
a
lot
of
projects
and
a
seed
investor
in
a
lot
of
like
prominent
projects
and
just
being
in
the
space
for
a
long
time.
B
You
know
what's
going
on
in
our
industry
and
and
why
it's
exciting,
because
the
industry
has
a
lot
of
haters,
and
you
know
I
think
people
get
mixed
messages
so
being
able
to
kind
of
learn
from
one
of
the
greats
in
the
industry.
I
think
that's
like
a
huge
blessing,
for
you
know
people
that
don't
get
to
go,
hang
out
at
like
harvard
business
school
or
something
like
that.
So
that's
just
like
a
quick
update.
B
The
reason
that
I've
been
up
till
3
am,
I
guess,
I'll,
like
drop
a
bit
of
alpha
in
terms
of
the
universe
launch
timeline,
we've
been
waiting
on
something
called
a
scraper
which
scrapes
like
all
the
nfts
in
the
ecosystem
and
like
also
just
like
a
generalized
back
end
that
we
had
to
build
and
a
back
end
is.
B
I
don't
know
how
to
explain
this
like
a
back-end
can
be
like
super
simple
or
can
be
like
extremely
complex,
like
suffice
to
say,
like
a
back-end
that
runs
amazon,
I
mean
they
literally
built
a
whole
company
off
of
like
running
the
cloud
infrastructure
that
originally
powered
their
back-end.
B
All
the
time,
a
big
reason
for
that
I've
said
this
on
numerous
amas
now,
like
it's,
a
big
part
of
the
reason
that
we're
delayed
a
lot
of
the
projects
currently
are
using
open
seas
back
in
and
the
reason
that
something
like
looks
rare
hasn't
really
gone
down
is
because
a
lot
of
the
trading
that's
happening
on
that
platform.
Isn't
like
humans
clicking
buttons.
B
I
I
don't
really
care
if
someone
flames
me,
but
it's
wash
trading
right.
So
it's
the
same
thing
that
uniswap
isn't
wash
trading,
but
uniswap
doesn't
necessarily
have
humans
clicking
buttons
on
their
website
that
are
generating
a
lot
of
those
transactions.
B
A
lot
of
them
are
market
making
bots
they're
kind
of
financial,
like
if
you
know
a
lot
about
finance
they're,
essentially
the
equivalent
of
like
prop
shops
like
they're,
like
algorithms,
that
are
essentially
running
trades
on
that
system,
and
so
people
in
the
nft
industry
don't
always
understand
that
a
lot
of
things
like
with
the
tokens
are
run
by
defy,
but
I
would
not
think
that
looks
rare
if
a
lot
of
those
are
algorithmic
bots
running
on
those
systems
necessarily
need
to
be
like
humans.
B
Clicking
buttons
us,
on
the
other
hand,
like
we
want
to
like
open
c,
needs
a
real
back
end.
So
when
people,
when
you
see
all
of
the
trading
happening
on
open
openc
like
yes,
some
of
it's
probably
algorithmic
bots
that
are
just
arbiting,
you
know
one
system
to
another:
you
get
a
cheaper
price
on,
looks
rare.
They
go
and
you
know,
sell
it
floor,
price
on
on
open
c
or
if,
like
nifty
gateway,
has
like
a
five
eighth
difference
on
fluff
burrows
than
what
openc
has
like.
B
Then
that's,
basically
an
arbitrage
opportunity.
So
I'm
not
saying
that
all
of
openc's
volume
is
like
humans
clicking
buttons,
but
in
the
history
of
crypto
other
than
like
centralized
exchanges
like
coinbase,
and
things
like
that.
Openc
definitely
has
like
the
most
organic,
like
real
human
being
eyeballs
on
that
site,
and
so
naturally,
from
that
growing
from
10
million
dollars
to
10
billion
dollars
of
volume.
B
I
do
know
that
there's
real
good
technologists
that
are
building
at
places
like
open
sea
building
at
places
like
zora,
I
have
respect
for
nifty
gateway,
and
so
when
you,
when
you're
making
a
product
that
real
people
want
to
use
organically,
you
have
to
prepare
that
it's
going
to
put
a
load
on
your
system
and
you
essentially
need
to
make
sure
that
your
system
can
handle
the
load
like
think
about
something
like
draftkings
99
of
their
traffic
is
ultimately
coming
10
an
hour
before
1
pm
eastern
standard
time
in
the
united
states.
B
B
B
But
yeah,
okay,
well,
whatever
same
five
weeks
away,
so
now,
it'd
be
four
weeks.
We
didn't
know
the
outcome
of
what
was
going
to
be
in
that
scraper
because
we
work
with.
We
worked
with
a
group
externally
to
help
us
build
that
function.
Once
we
got
the
back
end
done.
The
reason
is
because
a
lot
of
web3
developers
don't
have
the
experience
knowing
how
to
build
these
massive
back-end
systems.
We've
never
been,
as
an
industry
load
tested
the
way
that
openc
has
like.
B
B
The
issue
is,
is
that
openc
is
a
centralized
company
and
so
all
of
their
code
is
proprietary
and
you
don't
really
need
to
even
if
it
was
an
open
source
company
that
doesn't
mean
they
need
to
open
source
the
backend
infrastructure,
because
anybody
can
run
any
backend
infrastructure
to
that
code.
So
we
knew
that
we
hadn't.
A
D
A
B
No,
that's
fine
and
we
probably
may
throttle
people
too
if
they
try
to
ddos
our
network
like
it's,
not
bad.
What
openc
is
doing,
but
I
don't
blame
that
they're,
not
just
gonna
open
source,
our
code.
The
other
issue
is
that
openc,
unfortunately,
because
they
grew
so
fast
they
had
to
build
in
public.
We
got
to
fix
a
lot
of
these
issues
in
private,
so
I
think
that
our
infrastructure
is
actually
much
better
architected
and
able
to
scale.
B
However,
we
really
needed
to
be
able
to
test
this
thing
and
make
sure
that
it
works
properly,
so
the
timelines
for
launch
have
most
likely
been
as
expedited,
where
there's
one
final
component,
that
we
need
to
find
a
timeline
on
so
the
way
that
we're
gonna
launch
pretty
much
in
the
past
24
hours.
Now
that
we
have
this,
we
know
it's
working.
B
I
didn't
know
it
was
going
to
be
this
hard.
It
was
my
own
naivety,
but
we
know
how
to
do
it
now,
and
so
this
thing's
done
it's
complete.
Now.
What
we
have
to
do
is
we
have
to
rig
up
all
of
the
api
endpoints
and
make
sure
that
all
the
sdks
work
properly
and
we
need
to
figure
out
what
features
are
in
a
v1
and
a
v2,
and
so
the
v2,
I
think,
like.
Let's
call
it
like
a
semantics
thing.
B
So
when
I
say
like
v1
versus
v2,
it
may
be
actually
just
a
two-week
sprint.
It
may
be
two
two-week
sprints
before
a
v1
feature
becomes
a
v2
feature.
So
on
past
amas,
when
we
talked
about
the
auctions
would
probably
launch
before
the
marketplace.
We
actually
de-prioritize
the
auctions,
even
though
the
code's
99
percent
done
the
reason
that
we
did.
That
is
because
we
really
can't
launch
the
auctions
until
we
have
the
marketplace
even
one
from
the
reason
the
marketplace
was
delayed.
Was
this
back
end
and
scraper
the
back
end?
B
We
we
had
done
a
month
ago.
The
scraper
has
been,
I
mean
very
difficult
to
build
and
finish
it's
done,
and
it's
works
better
than
open
sea
scraper.
It
works
better
than
any
scraper
I've
ever
seen
in
ethereum,
even
coinbase's
scraper,
that's
scraping
transactions
or
history,
so,
like
I'm
very
pumped,
this
has
honestly
been
one
of
the
best
like
professional
days
of
my
life.
B
It's
like
anakin
skywalker
when
he's
like
finally
gets
that
pod
racer
working
he's
like
doing
what
he's
doing,
but
right
now
we
need
to
figure
out.
There
are
competitors
coming
in
the
market.
We
know
that
we
have
a
better
product,
a
substantially
better
product,
so
some
of
the
letting
good
be
the
enemy
of
great.
I
think
that
we
can
start
pushing
those
into
sprints.
B
B
B
The
search
function
has
to
be
lined
up
to
that
scraper,
meaning,
if
you
like,
like
if
you
line
up
the
collections,
how
it
scrapes
those
collections
affects
the
search
function
in
and
of
itself,
so
we
really
haven't
been
able
to
build
the
search
function
until
we
got
that
scraper
in
and
could
verify
that
it
worked
properly.
I
think
that
we'll
be
able
to
get
this
search
function
done
in
a
two-week
period.
That
will
ultimately
be
what
determines
whether
whether
or
not
this
launches
in
two
weeks
or
three
weeks,
everything
else.
B
That's
on
our
roadmap
in
this
sprint
is
very,
very,
very
doable,
but
ultimately
we
can't
launch
us.
I
mean
we
can't
launch
a
marketplace
if
you
can't
search
for
a
collection,
so
that
brings
us
kind
of
into
the
next
thing.
We
launch
the
marketplace.
We
know
the
scraper
is
extremely
fast.
Maybe
we
only
allow
users
out
of
the
gate,
so
we
can
get
it
in
that
two-week
period
to
search
for
collections.
B
However,
we
know
that
that
scraper
is
extremely
efficient,
and
so
all
we
need
to
do
is
rig
up
the
end
points
and
make
it
work
properly.
To
do
all
the
things
that
annoy
me
about
the
open
sea
scraper,
I
can't
search-
I
mean
I
can
search
my
dns
right
or
my
ens.
I
can't
search
my
I
can't
search
by
wallets.
If
I
have
fluffs
cobain
or
some,
I
can't
actually
go
just
look
it
up
by
fluffs
cobain.
I
gotta
go
look
for
fluffs
and
then
figure
out
which
one's
called
fluffs
cobain.
B
So
there's
there's
a
massive
opportunity
in
marketplaces
that
are
that's
being
avoided,
which
is
being
able
to
organize
by
those
scraper.
I
mean
by
the
search
function.
The
reason
that
that
search
function
isn't
being
opened
and
open,
c's
search
function,
isn't
amazing,
is
actually
a
result
of
their
back
end.
The
way
that
it's
architected,
where
they're
already
getting
massively
load
tested.
B
So
if
you
can
run
algorithms
into
that
search
function
and
run
queries
against
it,
the
way
that
people
do
with
google's
api,
then
you
end
up,
resulting
with
a
lot
of
api,
calls
that
ultimately
crashed
the
server
right.
Well,
we
architected
it
so
that
it
would
not
happen.
However,
I
don't
want
a
feature
like
that
to
delay
the
process
so
until
as
of
12
hours
ago,
we
did
not
have
the
finished
scraper
the
finished
scraper's
done.
It's
been
scraping,
it's
scraping
faster
than
any
scraper
that
we've
ever
seen
and
it's.
B
And
so,
when
you
scroll
down
on
openc-
and
you
can't
see
things
and
you
can't
keep
scrolling
quickly-
that's
going
to
be
a
very
different
experience
on
our
platform.
B
But
in
that
time
period
we
may
find
bugs
we'll
have
to
fix
things.
So
I
don't.
I
will
say
that
I
think
that
people
immediately
know
how
awesome
it
is,
what
we
built
and
how
much
of
a
better
experience
it
is,
but
from
a
dev
perspective
and
a
coding
perspective,
you
won't
really
know
until
you
watch
how
fast
that
we
iteratively
do
things
because
going
forward,
it's
not
going
to
be
a
seven
month.
Wait
for
changes,
it's
gonna,
be
a
two-week
wait
that
you're
like
holy.
This
got
better
holy.
This
got
better
holy.
B
B
So
we
want
people
to
be
able
to
use
this
product,
but
we
will
have
our
hands
full
continuing
to
integrate
everything,
and
so
I
pray
to
god
that
it's
two
weeks.
But
if
it's
three
weeks
it's
here,
I
mean
this
was
a
long
journey,
but
we
built
it
and
when
we
release
it
it
will
be
an
iteratively
better
experience.
B
B
A
I
don't
think
it's
gonna.
I
really
don't
think
it's
gonna
be
a
problem.
I
think
at
minimum
guys
at
the
minimum
you're
not
you're,
not
gonna,
be
able
to
search
for
a
specific
nft
but
you're
going
to
have
collection,
searches,
you'll,
be
able
to
go,
find
artists,
so
creators
and
users
you'll
be
like
I'm
I'm
90
percent.
Ultimately,.
B
I
don't
want
to
commit
to
what
is
actually
in
the
search
at
launch,
because
we
may
only
get
the
collections
done
and
then
our
only
priority
for
the
next
two
weeks
is
to
rig
everything
else
up,
but
one
thing
prioritizes
another
right
so
like.
If
we
launch
it
and
there's
a
bug,
then
we
have
to
fix
that
so
like
we
need
to
launch
it.
Where
you
can
search
collections,
that's
at
a
minimum.
We
want
to
launch
it
with
more.
B
I
do
not
think
that
launching
it
with
more
features
than
collections
is
worth
delaying
it
for
a
week,
and
that
was
the
conversation
that
we
had
today.
So
realistically,
there's
no
reason
to
delay
the
thing.
If
you
can,
I
mean
when
we
launch
it,
it's
it's
not
going
to
come
out
of
the
gate,
hitting
open
c
numbers
right.
B
So
we've
got
time
to
add
these
other
features
and
there's
zero
reason
to
delay
so
long
as
you
can
search
collections,
you
can
find
what
you
need
to
find
and
then
we'll
integrate
everything
else
that
we've
already
coded
the
back
end's
coded
the
front
end's
coded.
We
now
need
to
make
the
back
end.
Scraper
meet
the
back
end.
We
need
to
make
the
back
end.
B
A
Everything
is
done.
We
just
everything
is
basically
done,
we're
just
connecting
it
all
and
we're
gonna
try
and
get
this
out
as
soon
as
possible.
The
main
thing
that
everyone
needs
to
know
as
part
of
our
process
of
getting
this
out
is:
we
are
going
to
delay
the
auctions
and
prioritize
the
marketplace.
We
think
that
most
of
the
community
cares
more
about
the
marketplace
and
getting
a
marketplace
out.
It's
what
we've
promised
the
auction.
B
Auctions
before
the
marketplace
and
I'll
explain
why
a
lot
of
people
are
waiting
on
the
auctions.
Even
me
like,
I
want
to
do
custom
auctions
if
we
do
custom
auctions
without
having
a
marketplace
when,
when
fluffs
launched
because
universe
wasn't
like
auctions,
wasn't
live
right.
Well,
if
all
the
initial
listings,
when
you
do
an
auction,
this
is
why
we
mark
the
auction
to
zero.
This
is
how
we
get
all
the
long
tail
ability
of
the
of
like
to
get
onto
the
marketplace.
B
So
if
you're
on
an
auction
platform,
let's
say
it's
a
website
and
you
essentially,
while
you're
minting
you're
sniping
off
of
the
floor.
You're
listing
things
on
floor
you're,
basically
listening
things
above
you're
going
in
there
you're,
seeing
what
everything
is
that
that's
where
I
would
say,
90
of
the
initial
listings
happen,
and
then
everything
migrates
to
the
initial
listings.
So
if
we
launch
auctions
before
marketplace,
every
single
auction
that
happens
on
our
platform
is
just
sending
traffic
that
sticky
traffic
and
listings
to
competitive
marketplaces.
B
So
there
is
no
reason
to
launch
since
auctions
is
in
and
of
itself
a
gift
to
artists.
It's
also
a
long
tail
marketing
strategy
for
us
where
we're
going
to
bring
in
superior
artists
because
they're
going
to
get
more
of
their
own
art
right.
Well,
the
people
that
buy
those
off
men
they're
going
to
list
them
somewhere
and
they're
going
to
list
them
exactly
where,
if
it's
a
button
that
you
can
list
directly
off
of
the
auction
they're
going
to
list
it
on
universe,
if
you
can't
do
that,
then
they're
gonna
go
listed
on
openc.
B
So
if
we
go
and
do
a
bunch
of
really
dope
auctions,
let's
say
that
non-fungible
pepe
launches
on
our
auction
marketplace
before
openc
happens
or
like
what
happened
with
fluffs
they
launched
before
our
marketplace
exists.
Well,
all
of
that
traffic
now
went
to
open
c.
So
we
should
not
be
launching
auctions
until
marketplace
is
done,
that's
just
a
business
decision
that
has
nothing
to
do
with
code.
I
think
it's
a
very
dumb
decision
to
do
that,
so
the
the
auctions
could
be
done
this
week.
We
shouldn't
launch
them
until
the
marketplace
is
humming.
A
Yeah,
I
agree
okay,
so
that
was
actually
a
development
update
from
tyler.
I
know
it
may
have
sounded
that's.
A
It
is
but
yeah
ryan
usually
does
that
part,
but
he's
he's
on
a
plane
to
eat
denver
because
he's
speaking
tomorrow
so
yeah.
Thank
you,
faris
omnium.
I
need
to.
A
I
need
to
mute
you
because
you're
making
some
noise
but
yo
but
yeah,
okay,
sorry,
and
then
I
actually
need
to
give
some
updates
on
the
polymorphs,
because
we've
been
a
little
quiet
about
them,
there's
something
that
we
have
been
building
in
secret,
I'm
not
sure
if
a
lot
of
people
have
known,
but
at
the
very
beginning
of
the
polymorph
journey,
a
lot
of
people
came
out
and
it
really
hurt
my
feelings,
but
it's
okay.
I
got
over
it.
It
strengthened
my
confidence.
A
They
said
the
polymorphs
were
a
little
ugly,
so
we,
what
we
did
is
we
we
reached
out
to
a
lot
of
artists
in
the
space.
We
chose
to
go
with
some
artists
that
have
small
some
smaller
platforms,
just
so
that
we
could
kind
of
help
promote
their
art
and
their
collections.
A
A
We're
gonna
use
the
polymorph
contracts
to
allow
people
to
come
in
and
mint
these
artworks
and
they'll
be
able
to
be
scrambled,
but
they're
gonna
be
more
of
a
they're
gonna,
be
more
of
a
pfp
I'd
say
than
the
polymorphs
were,
but
it's
a
mix
of
the
polymorphs.
A
You
know
because
we'll
have
those
original
polymorph
faces,
but
there
is
a
lot
of
really
cool
art
that
we
have
that
has
been
submitted
for
this
project.
A
Some
of
our
internal
artists
were
a
part
of
it
and
also
we
went
out
and
got
a
ton
of
this
out
in
the
industry
because
we
wanted
to
promote
some
of
them
so
shout
out
to
kyle
gordon.
He
actually
helped
me
meet
and
connected
me
with
a
ton
of
artists
that
have
you
know
not
as
big
of
platforms,
but
we
didn't
want
to
get
like
render,
or
you
know
the
the
biggest
people
for
this,
because
one
thing
that
universe
has
always
kind
of
said
was
like
hey.
A
We
want
to
be
a
platform
for
artists
so
like
how
are
we
helping
if
we
just
go,
get
like
render
or
like
some
of
the
biggest
artists
and
get
them
to
do
a
project?
So
we
wanted
to
kind
of
promote
some
of
these
other
artists
that
just
we
thought
we
felt
needed
wanted.
You
know
we
personally
thought
that
you
know
we
wanted
to
give
them
exposure,
not
necessarily
that
they
needed
it,
but
it
just
helps.
A
So
we
wanted
to
really
create
an
artist
driven
project
around
the
polymorphs
and
we
we
haven't
figured
out
exactly
how
we're
going
to
distribute
them.
We're
leaning
more
towards
a
timed
mint
where
everyone
who
has
a
polymorph
will
have
the
ability
to
go
and
mint
one
works
in
a
certain
time
frame.
We.
F
Have
we
have
a
lot
of
really
cool
tools
coming
for
our
marketplace
and
minting,
so
it
we
will
maybe
use
one
of
those
to
roll
out
these
polymorphic
faces.
A
Yeah
I
mean
like
it
actually
is
kind
of
a
blessing
like
being
an
nft
marketplace
that
has
a
that
has
a
a
pilot
like
a
just
in
any
any
nft
collection,
because
we
can
literally
go
put
like
a
burn
to
mint
button
on
the
front
end
on
on
our
marketplace,
and
this
is
the
really
cool
part
even
like
working
with
artists
is
like
we
talked
with
mansel
a
few
weeks
ago,
like
he's
already
asked
us,
if
there's
like
a
way
that
we
can
use,
like
the
ash
token
to
and
like
add,
front-end
features
to
his
art
drop
and
realistically,
like
we,
we
haven't
been
able
to
fully
commit
and
help
him
yet
because
our
you
know
we're
all
of
our
dev
team
and
talent
is
focused
on
getting
this
marketplace
out.
B
B
Okay,
like
that's
very
important
for
everyone
to
know
that
we've
never
touched
that
capital.
What
ended
up
happening
is
that
we,
we
still
are
hiring
a
full-time
team
to
work
on
polymorphs,
because
that's
what
like,
I
want
a
dev
team
to
be
able
to
build
cool
stuff.
Not
for
any
other
reason.
Then
I
love
the
polymorphs.
I
want
to
build
cool
stuff
into
them,
so
like
I'll
self-funded,
if
I
need
to,
but
every
single
good
developer
that
we
found
ended
up
getting
sucked
into
the
marketplace
and
that
wasn't
intentional,
it
wasn't
taking
resources
away.
B
It
was
when
we
found
someone.
They
filled
another
role
that
we
needed
for
the
marketplace,
because
the
scope
of
the
marketplace
and
auctions
and
minting
and
what
we
were
building-
grew
exponentially
a
thousand
x
while
we
were
building
it
right.
So
everything
that
we've
done
on
the
marketplace
side
has
been
funded
by
the
multi-seg
that
the
original
contributors
provided
and
none
of
the
polymorph
money
has
been
crossed
over
we've,
never
asked
for
any
of
it.
We
haven't
touched
it.
So
I
don't.
I
just
wanted.
A
One
clarification:
we
are
going
to
touch
the
polymorph
money
with
our
first
proposal,
because
we
did
we
are
going
to
pay
some
of
the
artists
that
were
involved
in
this
polymorphic
faces.
We
we
didn't
want
them
to
be
like
not
get
paid.
Obviously
we
can.
If
the
community
wants
like
we
can,
I
don't
think
it
was
a
significant
amount
of
money.
I
mean
it's.
A
B
A
In
a
proposal
to
to
set
that
up
over
the
next
week
but
yeah,
I
have
some
alpha.
B
That
I
want
to
drop
on
polymorphs
before
we
do
that
proposal.
Just
so
everyone's
aware,
but
okay,
I
think
mark
get
through
what
you're
saying.
A
Well,
I
was
just
clarifying
that
you
know
we.
We
do
want
to
use
that
money
for
things
but
like
it's
not
for
us,
we
want
to
build.
We
want
to
build
other,
like
cool
collections
like
the
whole
reason
we
did.
B
About
this,
I
I
think
the
polymorphs
look
sick,
but
ultimately
I
always
saw
him
as
little
video
game
creatures
and
I
don't
think
mario
is
the
mona
lisa
either
so
like.
If
you
play
a
video
game
and
every
npc
looks
like
the
mona
lisa,
like
I
mean
cool,
like
I'm
more
worried
about
the
gaming
dynamics,
which
is
why
we
built
tech
into
them.
So
I.
B
Regardless
of
whether
they're
ugly,
our
goal
is
to
give
them
utility
and
make
them
functional,
if
you
want
to
make
the
mona
lisa
functional,
she's
creative
commons,
leonardo
da
vinci's,
been
dead
for
500
years.
Like
we
didn't,
I
mean
I
personally
didn't
start
doing
this
for
art
critics.
I
think
I
think
nfts
have
a
lot
more
use
cases
than
art.
A
B
Wait
hold
on,
I
want
to
say
one
thing
about
the
polymorphs,
because
I
want
to
bring
it
home
about
the
whole
kind
of
funding
thing
when
we
do
pull
out
proposals
mark
and
a
lot
of
even
the
team
members
on
this
call.
Don't
know
that.
I
think
everybody
knows
that
I'm
somewhat
attached
to
goblin
world
or
goblin
town
from
fluff
world.
B
B
His
friends
next
years
I
was
self-funding,
a
project
that
I
thought
got
a
little
too
close,
so
I
gave
it
to
them
what
I
decided
to
do
afterwards
with
the
artists
that
were
working
on
it
was
I
decided
to
self-fund
my
own
nft
drop,
that's
ultimately
a
gift
to
the
doubt.
At
least
it
started.
That
way
I
mean
I
may
need
to
get
some
of
my
like.
B
Hopefully,
the
dial
give
me
some
reimbursement
from
it,
because
it's
been
more
expensive
than
I
expected,
but
I
hired
a
like
grammy
nominated
musician
to
make
game
art
and
sounds
these
are
all
basically
I'm
not
gonna
drop
what
they
are.
They're
variations
of
the
polymorphs
and
they'll,
probably
mint
when
people
buy
them
as
a
true
like
profile
picture,
rarity
type
cascade.
B
However,
they're
not
going
to
be
profile.
Pictures
I've
already
hired
three-dimensional
artists,
they're,
building
maps,
they're
building
a
lot
of
things,
which
is
why
it
got
a
lot
more
expensive
than
I
thought,
but
whatever
it
I'm
here
to
have
fun,
I'm
I'm
gonna
make
no
money
off
this,
I'm
giving
it
to
the
doubt
the
dow
is,
if
it
does
well,
I
have.
B
B
I
will
want
to
vote
it
out
of
the
dow
so
that
I
can
build
the
stuff
that
I
mean
this
stuff
isn't
cheap
right
like
I
can
make
three-dimensional
renderings
but
to
actually
build
something.
It's
it's
not
going
to
be
inexpensive.
So
the
point
of
all
of
this
was,
I
want
a
metaverse
that
I
can
run
around
with
the
lobby.
Lobsters
will
have
their
area
and
layer.
B
I
want
what
x
is
redacted
that
I
want
to
drop
and
also
the
polymorphs
themselves
that
we've
been
3d
rendering,
so
you
can
play
around
in
the
fluffsboros
and
then
I
think
fluffs
like
us.
I
think
we
should
let
the
fluffs
in
party
bear,
but
I
don't
want
to
be
a
place
where
people
can
go.
Listen
to
music.
I
wanted
to
make
it
very
different
and
fun
and
a
completely
different
use
case.
B
B
Like
and
the
artists
that
we
have
involved
are
incredible,
but
ultimately
the
original
thing
that
we
drop
is
just
a
it's
just
the
face
of
it.
What's
coming
behind,
it
is
what's
important
and
I
want
like
I
want
to
have
madaversi.
I
want
like
the
polymorphs
to
be
able
to
run
around
and
stuff
up
and
have
fun
like
the
whole
point
of
them.
Is
they
were
supposed
to
be
fun,
and
so
everything
from
the
music,
the
art,
everything
it's.
B
I
will
just
say
that
my
intention
is
not
to
release
like
a
artistic
masterpiece.
My
intention
is
to
make
functional
technology
that
is
very,
very
fun
to
use,
and
so
I'm
kind
of
going
in
a
different
direction
than
the
rest
of
the
industry
on
this.
But
when
that
happens,
multiverse,
which
is
a
company
that
troy
started
to
build
some
things
on
top
of
universe
that
we
do
need.
I
I
understand
the
concept
of
dows
and
I
hate
companies
too.
The
reason
that
a
company
needs
to
exist
is
not
me
and
troy's
decision.
B
It's
that
in
a
lot
of
cases,
there
isn't
really
legal
precedent
to
like
for
us
to
be
able
to
do
certain
things
like
sign
licensing
agreements
or.
B
To
my
house
and
hooked
up
with
my
wi-fi,
I'm
almost
done
off
my
horse.
No,
no
you're
good,
you're
good!
We,
the
last
thing
we
heard,
was
licensed
yeah.
So
like
there's
certain
scenarios
where,
like
we
may
need
to
like
license
a
song
or
we
may
need
to
license
a
technology
to
run
nodes
like
you
can't
do
everything
in
a
dow
right
now
and
it's
because,
like
nobody,
went
dow
first
before
me
and
troy,
did
it
at
barnbridge
there's
not
like
legal
frameworks
to
do
all
this
stuff.
B
Yet
so
there's
some
things
that
we
need
to
have
a
company
to
order
in
order
to
do
right,
and
so
in
this
scenario
a
lot
of
these
artists,
I'll,
probably
put
under
the
company
that
troy
is
running
which
we
had
to
change
the
name
again
because
of
legal
reasons.
Multiverse
was
trademarked,
we're
doing
everything,
creative
commons
and
open
source.
B
So
we
had
to
change
the
name
to
graviton.
When
all
of
this
happens,
we
have
been
modeling,
those
polymorphs
they're,
all
three-dimensional
all
the
specs
and
renders
will
be
the
same.
B
I
will
ask
that
the
dow
votes
me
money
so
that
I
can
actually
build
this
thing,
but
ultimately,
y'all
can
honestly
tell
me
to
off
like
hopefully
you
pay
me
the
money
that
I
at
least
put
in,
because
I
thought
it
was
going
to
be
way
cheaper
but
like
at
the
end
of
the
day.
I
don't
want
to
make
a
profit
on
this.
I
just
want
to
actually
build
some
that
I
want
to
use
and
so
I'll
drop
it.
B
Everything
will
be
coded
to
the
dow
I'll,
probably
put
something
on
the
front
end
that
pulls
out
at
least
some
money
for
the
artist
that
helped
me
and
then
it's
up
to
everybody
here
to
actually
let
me
build
this
right,
but
that's
what
I
want
to
do
and
so
like
yeah
we're
not
taking
the
polymorph
money
to
do
anything
with
it,
we're
if
anything,
I'm
spending
my
own
money
to
make
them
cool
but
yeah.
I
do
want
to
build
this
and
I
it's
been
fun,
as
it's
honestly
been
a
blissful
distraction
from
real
work.
A
You
want
to
know
something.
That's
really
funny
is
to
back
up
what
tyler's
saying
we
had.
We
have
internal
polymorph
calls
with
literally
just
our
artists
so
like
we
have
a
lot
of
developers,
but
we
also
probably
have
an
in-house
team.
Of
probably
I
mean
between
all
of
the
dows
that
tyler's
involved
in,
I
would
say
we
maybe
have
30
to
35,
but
universe
has
15
to
20
artists
working
on
all
so
many
different
things,
but
over
the
last
few
weeks
we've
been
working
on
the
real
polymorph.
A
We've
been
having
like
three-hour
internal
calls
that,
like
all
the
artists,
have
been
having
so
much
fun
like
going
back
over
because,
like
our
one
of
our
lead
artists,
who
knows
how
to
do
some
pretty
cool
development
stuff,
his
name
is
vegaslav.
He
built
this
generator
and
honestly
tyler
thinks
that
we
should
release
this
to
a
lot
of
different
teams.
Just
so
they
can
practice
like
trying
to
figure
out
if,
like
art
is
clipping
each
other.
Like
we've
seen,
a
lot
of
nft
projects
have
really
bad
clipping.
B
Or
that
coinbase
just
started
using
the
what
are
they
called
the
the
hapes
like
you
know
how
their
like
ears
clip
off
like
we
built
internal
software,
to
render
our
things
to
make
sure
that
that
didn't
happen
like
I
think
we
should
release
that
for
the
polymorphs
like
just
so,
people
can
play
around
with
what
they'd
get
if
they
scrambled,
but
even
more
so
I
really
honestly
think
that
we
should
just
give
that
to
the
industry,
so
people
can
use.
I
mean
we
just
built
it
for
ourselves.
B
A
E
A
So,
like
a
lot
of
those
images
were
blurry
and
they
were
on
a
line,
but
like
I
I
promise
you.
These
are
all
high
resolution
right
now
we're
we're
on
week,
three
of
just
testing
with
that
generator
to
make
sure
that
we
don't
have
clipping
errors
and
sorry
if
I
sound
like
I'm
out
of
breath,
I'm
like
like
way
in
a
high
altitude.
So
I'm
just
like
trying
to
get
used
to
this.
F
Yeah
I
was
trying
to
talk
about
this
on
the
last
ama,
but
tribal
told
me
not
to
to
hold
off
but
yeah
that
that
generator
thing
is
such
a
simple
build.
It
would
be.
I
don't
see
why
we
wouldn't
open
source
that
and
just
like,
let
people
know
that
they
can
fork
it
if
they
want
and
use
it
for
their
project,
because
it's
as
soon
as
I
saw
it.
I
was
thinking
like.
D
F
And
yeah
I
mean
I
I'm
surprised
that
it's
not
already
a
thing
that
people
have
like
access
to
if
we
can
provide
that.
That's
just
super
helpful.
F
Yeah
yeah,
and
not
even
about
the
fun,
though
there's
like
even
good
projects
like
I'm,
not
gonna,
lie
even
on
the
fluffs
like
there's,
definitely
a
few
fluffs
that
have
like
little
glitches.
If
they
have
certain
trait
pairs
and
every
project
I
told
aaron,
he
should
do
it
for
the
seekers.
Every
single
project
should
be
doing
this.
A
Yeah
so
well
internally,
it's
just
something
we're
using,
but
we
are
definitely
going
to
look
at
releasing
that
for
everyone
to
use.
So
I
think
we've
gone
over
enough
stuff
internally
that
we
have
that
we
have
going
on
just
because
I
want
to
be
cognizant
of
time,
because
I
do
know
that
we
have
a
few
questions
in
the
pre-ama
channel.
So
if
you're
listening-
and
this
is
your
first
ama-
we
have
a
pre
ama
channel-
you
guys
can
go
we're
gonna
start
with
fluffernutter.
A
A
A
If
that's
something
we're
going
to
do,
we
essentially
are
going
to
have
to
push
that
to
a
dow
proposal
and
we'll
let
the
xyz
token
voters
vote
on
it
me
personally,
I
think
incentivizing
openc
users
is
very
important
because
that's
where
most
liquidity
is,
I
do
see
the
side
of
yeah
a
lot
of
people
who
get
airdrops
dump
them,
but
essentially
we're
not
so
worried
about
the
the
token
we're
more
worried
about
like
like
this
can
decentralize
xyz
together.
B
Is
it
hasn't
like
I
can
answer
this
question?
I
think
after
the
sos
right
like
it
seemed
like
a
good
idea
after
looks,
it
seemed
like
a
good
idea.
B
Ultimately,
it's
very
similar
to
like
wi-fi
or
yield
farming
like
this
stuff
works
until
it
doesn't
like
icos
work
to
decentralize
tokens,
but
then
there
were
reasons
that
we
can't
do
them
anymore.
Then
we
had
other
ways
that
we
tried
to
distribute
these
networks.
Those
may
or
may
not
work
anymore
when
you
put
like
like
when
you
distribute
these
things
and
then
people
like
acquire
them.
What
ends
up
happening?
B
It's
hard
to
talk
about
this
without
talking
about
price,
because
price
isn't
the
outcome?
It's
the!
The
outcome
needs
to
be
getting
this
in
the
hands
of
a
lot
of
people,
but
with
after
looks
it
clearly
stopped
working
because
that
marketplace
that
is
actually
good,
that
it's
called
like
it
has
x
in
it.
B
It
like
started
doing
it
last
night,
though
those
just
essentially
were
bots
that
just
sold
immediately
right,
so
that
doesn't
do
anything
to
foster
a
community
if
it
just
becomes
a
race
to
how
fast
can
you
play
hot
potato
and
get
rid
of
this
thing
so
like?
Ultimately,
I
don't
even
know
when
that
question
was
posted.
B
C
A
Something
really
quick.
Our
last
few
amas
have
been
more
so
like
questions
in
the
discord
like
in
our
chat
channels.
We
would
love
for
people
to
come
up
and,
like
have
discussions
like
don't
be
afraid
to
talk.
I
know
like
me
and
tyler
can
talk
all
day
but
yeah.
We,
we
love
people
coming
up
and
talking
so
yeah
fluff
enough
nutter.
Take
it
away.
Dude.
C
So
I,
when
we
originally
had
that
discussion,
I
don't
know
if
it
was
actually
the
governance.
I
don't
know
what
that
place
is
called,
but
where
we
had
that
forum
discussion
about
you
know
that
was
around
the
time
the
sos
has
come
out
and
I
think
most
of
us
in
that
thread
were
in
agreeance
for
it.
C
I
don't
think
the
token
airdrop
is
the
move
like
I
literally
like
I'm
in
many
nft
communities
and
I'm
an
nft
person,
and
even
me,
like
I
go,
I
like
at
this
point,
I'm
just
ready
to
dump
like
they're
all
doing
the
same
thing
it
seems
like,
but
I
do
think
incentive
like
you're
right,
where
we
need
to
incentivize
people
to
to
join
this
platform
like,
but
I
think
there
has
to
be
a
way
to
do
it.
Besides.
C
Just
like
air
dropping
people,
tokens
like
there
has
to
be
some
better
way
because,
like
in
the
end,
you
know
a
lot
of
stuff
came
out
about,
looks
rare
last
night
also
and
they
like
they
a
lot
of
stuff,
got
doxed
on
them
and
what
they're
doing
with
the
money
and
they're?
Basically
just
selling
all
the
wrapped
eat
that
they're
like
wish-washing
in
on
themselves.
So
I
mean
and
and
now
x2y2.
A
This
is,
you
know,
this
might
sound
crazy,
but
like
this
might
be
the
thing
that
the
nft
space
needed,
like
a
lot
of
us,
were
defy
people
and
we
knew
about
the
risks
of
crypto.
I
mean
that's
essentially
why
it's
so
easy
to
like
these
boarded
people
they
just
give
over
their
seed
phrase.
They
were
never
taught
crypto
security
or,
like
don't
keep
your
crypto
keys
on
a
on
a
cloud
server.
I.
F
Mean
I
think,
fluffernutter
is
making
a
really
good
point
about
how
people
are
dumping,
a
hundred
percent.
The
first
thing
I
think,
when
I
get
one
of
these
air
drops,
is
dump
immediately
and
buy
into
projects
that
I
actually
have
conviction,
for
I
do
that
we
didn't
spend
all
this
time.
Building
this
marketplace.
F
A
big
thing
about
it
is
that
hasn't
been
discussed
and
is
this
strategy
that
we
have,
which
I
don't
know
if
we're
talking
about.
So
I
won't
explain
that
right
now,
but
I
think
that
the
strategy
that
we've
come
up
with
has
been
robust
and
and
thought
out
a
ton
and
incentivizing
people
to
move
over
their
listings
from
openc
on
a
universe.
F
Anyone
willing
to
do
that
in
the
top
200
projects
is
basically
somebody
in
the
nft
community
who
understands
and
willing
to
try
out
a
new
platform.
So
I
think
that
the
I
think
you're
right,
that
just
giving
people
tokens
and
just
saying
that
here
you
go-
is
not
the
move,
but
that's
not
what
we
want
to
do.
B
B
A
B
We
want
this
thing
to
be
in
the
universe
for
a
very
long
time,
and
we
want
real
users
that
want
to
govern
the
platform.
We
already
have
people
that
have
stuck
around
and
have
been
waiting
for
this
and
believed
in
it.
Let's
release
it
two
weeks:
let's
figure
it
out
right,
even
out
of
the
gate,
I
don't
think
that
we
should
be
incentivizing
listings
to
move
over.
We
need
to
make
sure
that
from
our
core
community
of
true
believers
that
those
things
even
that
moving
a
listing
over
doesn't
break
right.
B
C
Need
to
I
just
branding
that
I'll
be
done
after
this.
I
agree,
though,
100
that
when
you
originally
said
that
we
need
to
incentivize
to
the
openc
users,
but
in
retrospect
also,
I
don't
think
we
need
to
incentivize
to
the
opencv
units.
C
I
think
the
openc
users
are
like
begging
and
like
seeking
for
something
new
so,
like
I
think,
you're
right,
I
don't
think
the
airdrop
is
the
way
to
incentivize
at
least
not
like
right
away,
but
I
definitely
agree
that
it
needs
to
be
done
and
I
think,
as
a
community
deciding
a
way
to
incentivize
other
people
to
come
is
the
best
the
best
way
to
go,
and
regardless
of
what
is
decided,
I
stand
behind
you
guys,
no
matter
what
so
I'm
universe
till
I
die,
I
always
have
been
always
will
be.
So
thanks.
F
Like
let's
say
we
do
an
air
drop
for
everyone
who
bids
on
auctions.
People
can
just
make
a
million
wallets
in
bed.
Let's
say
we
make
a
air
drive
for
everyone
who
sells
an
item.
People
can
just
wash
trade.
Let's
say
we
make
an
air
drop
for
I
I
mean
I'm
not
going
to
sit
here
and
do
this,
but
the
it
goes
on
and
on,
like
you
really
have
to
consider
every
exploit,
because
people
will
do
it
like
the
same.
B
Try
and
tyler's
trying
to
talk.
You
said:
oh
no,
don't
you
can
talk
over
me,
I'm
not
saying
it
like.
I
and
someone
else
said
that
what
I
was
saying
is
nobody's
used
this
platform
yet
nobody's
launched
at
this
point,
it's
more
innovative
to
launch
without
some
type
of
airdrop
right.
Why
don't
we
get
this
out,
knowing
that
we
actually
have
a
real
community,
get
them
to
use
it
see
where
the
faults
are
and
that's
what
we
start
to
incentivize
off
like
for
all.
We
know
we
launched
this
thing.
B
B
Let's
get
that
product
out:
let's
let
it
sit
and
market,
let's
get
feedback
from
our
true
like
close-knit
people,
and
then,
let's
figure
out
a
strategy
to
go
after
open
c
long
term,
like
dumping
all
the
tokens
in
the
treasury
to
just
give
them
to
openc
users.
It
hasn't
worked
up
to
this
point.
So,
let's
reinvent
the
wheel
right,
like
I
think.
F
We
could
we
could
use
our
dr
opium
thing
that
we
had
to
maybe
like
maybe
collab,
that
with
this
idea,
but
I
really
like
the
strategy
that
we
came
up
with
the
reason
I
think
the
top
200
projects
really
makes
a
lot
of
sense
is
because
of
this
whole
exploit
situation
that
I
brought
up.
If
you
include
projects
with
low
volume,
it
creates
the
window
for
people
to
make
a
project,
create
an
organic
volume
and
then
exploit
our
airdrop.
F
So
using
the
top
200
projects
is
almost
a
necessity
if
we
end
up
doing
this
route
because
of
the
fact
that
it
prevents
just
pretty
much
like
so
many
exploits
like
ninety
percent
of
them.
F
I
I
think
that
also
the
the
idea
of
making
it
to
where
it's
not
like
listings,
moving
forward
like
once
our
marketplace
is
out
only
pre-existing
listings
on
these
top
200
projects
will
qualify
for
the
airdrop
if
you
migrate
them,
and
that
listing
honestly,
in
my
opinion,
should
have
to
sell
that,
and
I
mean
even
that
right
there
can
be
exploited
because
somebody
could
just
go
buy
it
on
their
other
wallet,
but
it
there's
a
limit
at
that
point
to
it's.
F
Only
these
10
only
these
nfts
in
these
top
200
projects,
so
it
wouldn't
be.
There
would
be
a
limit
to
how
much
could
be
taken
from
that.
I
think
it
would
get
people's
eyes
on
the
project
that
have
the
most
volume
in
nfts,
like
the
largest
whales,
and
even
if,
at
the
beginning,
some
people
are
dumping
the
token
overall
it
would
have
people's
nfts
all
available
to
trade
on
universe
and
they're
getting
charged
less
fees
moving
forward.
F
A
B
But
I
think
that's
where
we
need
to
start,
because
we
know
it's
better
in
some
areas.
We
don't
really
know
where
people
are
going
to
complain
and
think
it
sucks
so
like
right
now.
B
That's
what
I
would
urge
the
community
and
everyone
asking
these
questions,
I'm
not
saying
that
we
don't
go
to
market
with
a
tokenomics
strategy
like
in
no
way
am
I
saying
that
I'm
saying
that
I
think
that
we
have
a
superior
product
and
the
people
that
are
on
this
call.
Like
I
mean
how
many
people
are
on
this
call
like
over
100
or
over
50,
like
these
people
are
probably
gonna.
Try
the
platform
out
and
they're
gonna
give
their
feedback.
B
We
can
get
that
feedback
and
intake
it
and
then
figure
out
a
strategy
going
forward
because
we're
not
when
looks
rare
came
out.
They
had
no,
no
one
knew
what
looks
rare
was
when
this
new
project
came
out.
Last
night,
it's
been
in
the
market
for
two
weeks.
No
one
was
paying
attention
to
it,
so
they
resorted
to
that
right,
but
ultimately,
right
now.
I
think
that
we
have
the
scenario
to
release
this
thing.
B
B
We
may
have
a
vulnerability
like
there
could
be
a
hack
in
the
system.
There
could
be
a
hack
in
the
incentive
itself,
so
I
think
we
should
basically
push
this
thing
out,
get
feedback
from
everyone,
and
then
we
all
come
to
a
conclusion
on
some
like
we
have
ideas,
we
probably
have
good
ideas,
because
we've
been
using
the
thing
and
we
know
how
it
works.
I
honestly
want
everyone
else's
idea.
Once
they've
had
a
chance
to
toggle
with
them.
B
A
Matter,
I'm
literally
telling
you
right
now
that
anyone
that
has
is
going
to
see
our
front
end
is
going
to
say
that
it
is
superior.
We're
not
going
to
launch
a
marketplace
that
doesn't
filter
like
we're.
Gonna
like
our
is
going.
It
works,
there's
a
reason
why
we
took
the
time
and
we
didn't
release
it
in
october,
when
we
had
thought
we
were
going
to
be
able
to,
we
had
to
keep
building
the
industry
changed
like
when
we
started
building
opencl
what
a
hundred
thousand
wallets.
Now
they
have
like.
A
I
mean
at
the
time.
Tyler
said
this
before,
like
I
think,
uniswap
was
getting
like
11
or
12
000
clicks
a
day
like
that
was
the
number
one
visited
defy
site
like
they
had
the
most
traffic,
for
I
mean
until
open
c
started.
Doing
a
billion
dollars
in
in
volume
I
mean,
and
even
some
of
those
months
that
open
seated
crazy
volume
so
did
you
swap?
I
mean
like
we?
We
looked
at
these
things
and
we
knew
probably.
B
B
Swapping
in
to
eat
or
sell
a
need
and
they're
selling
it
into
usdt
or
usdc
to
get
it
to
an
exchange
because
they
need
to
pay
bills
like
an
artist
right,
they're,
absolutely
related,
but
ultimately
everybody.
I
think
we
can
just
dead
this
conversation
and
say
I
think
that
we
should
release
the
product
without
any
type
of
grand
glory
like
ponzinomics
and
let
people
start
using
it,
and
then
we
have
time
to
to
operate
these
these
flash
in
the
pan.
Things
they've
never
worked
in
history
even
sushi.
B
G
B
It's
on
the
route
to
be
either
is
my
point
like
this.
This
is
a
really
good
way
to
make
the
founders
really
quick
and
then
everybody
else
is
left
with
it.
That's
not
the
plan
here
like
we
took
all
the
time
building
a
real
product.
I
think
we
release
a
real
product,
get
product
feedback,
and
then
we
work
with
this
community
that
we've
built
to
figure
out
how
we
improve
it
over
time.
That's
how
you
actually
scale
something
useful.
That's
how
unit
swap
did
it?
That's?
B
How
makers
dow
did
it
so
like
we
need
to
ignore
these
like
flash
and
the
pam
ponzi's.
If
we
wanted
to
create
a
flash
in
the
pam
ponzi,
why
did
I
not
just
do
it
eight
months
ago
change
my
face
and
disappear
off
the
industry
like
there's
no
reason
to
burn
our
token
supply
for
for
what
like
to
get
awareness
for
for
something
like.
I
think
we
have
a
long
time
to
to
do
that.
This
is
a
long
way
that
you
actually
build
a
real
product
that
works
and
get
real
users.
B
That's
what
openc
did
they
started
in
2018
or
17.?
They
hired
nate
was
working
for
me
in
2018,
so
I
know
that
he
wasn't
cto,
then,
like
maker
dollar
took
them
five
years.
I
I'm
not
saying
that.
I
think
it's
going
to
take
that
long
in
an
nft
market
where
everybody's
excited,
but
we
don't
need
to
piss
away
our
token
supply
on
a
maybe.
A
I
I
completely
agree
with
you
tyler,
so
I
think
we
can
move
away
from
this
question.
Thank
you,
fluffernutter
for
that
question
that
honestly
led
to
a
pretty
odd
discussion.
We're
gonna
move
next
to
itm,
dot,
eth
or
ltm.eth.
A
Question
is:
if
an
artist
or
a
contributor
has
a
collection
they
want
to
exclusively
have
on
the
marketplace.
How
would
they
go
about
getting
that
started
and
he
uses
the
example
that
openc
says
that
you
need
third-party
requirements
and
cooperation
to
coordinate
and
get
this
settled.
So
I
guess
I
can
kind
of
shortly
answer
this
and
say
that
universe,
xyz
is
more
of
a
protocol
marketplace.
A
So
realistically
I
don't
know
if
you
can,
if,
if
you
list
on
universe,
anyone
can
technically
build
a
front
end
to
your
listing,
so
it'd
be
very
hard
to
make
it
exclusive
to
universe.
Xyz
like
our
front
end,
but
when
something's
listed
on
universe,
xyz
back
end,
it's
listed
on
the
protocol
level
and-
and
we
do
see
marketplaces
toward
like
vertically
and
also
we
see
l2
cross
chain
stuff
coming
into
play.
A
So
like
what,
if
you
had
a
central
membrane
that
you
could
put
all
the
listings
on,
anyone
can
build
a
front
end
and
access
that
liquidity.
I
think
that's
the
best
way
to
explain
that
and
if,
if
that
makes
sense,
you
can
see
why
that
would
be
really
hard
to
make
it
essentially
exclusive.
A
I'm
sure,
like
I'm
not
even
sure
I
have
the
smart
contract
expertise
to
say
that
you
can
even
make
an
nft
exclusively
listable
on
an
individual
marketplace.
I'm
not
even
sure,
that's
possible.
A
Because,
essentially,
like
a
lot
of
like,
I
could
just
make
a
contract
that,
like
there's,
always
work
around
some
of
this
stuff.
So
that's
a
very
hard
question
to
answer
but
like
essentially,
if
you
lift
it
on
universe
protocol,
it's
going
to
be
listed
across
the
whole
universe
and
anybody
that
plugs
into
it
will
be
able
to
access.
But
I'm
not
sure
exclusivity
is,
is
even
possible
on
a
protocol
level
and
I'm
not
sure
it
actually
will
help
your
nft
project.
A
But
I
I
mean,
like
that's
a
that's
my
opinion
like
I
just
like
nba
top
shot
has
done
great,
but
I
always
in
the
arguer
that
I
think
nft
or
a
nba
top
shot
would
have
done
way
better
if
they
had
like
just
more
ways
to
access
those
nfts
than
going
through
zapper
like
or
what
was
it
dapper
labs
like
I
got
locked
out
of
my
nba
top
shot
account.
A
It
took
me
two
months
to
recover
it,
and
then
I
never
ever
bought
an
nft
on
that
platform
again
because
it
was
like
that
was
just
my
experience.
But
hopefully
I
answered
answered
that
good.
A
I'm
gonna
keep
scrolling
down
just
to
see
more
questions.
It
looks
like
there's
a
lot
of
stuff
people
commenting
just
on
the
conversations
we've
been
having.
So
if
anyone
like
one,
maybe
just
ask
a
question,
while
I'm
reading
all
the
conversations
please
feel
free
and
if
I
server
muted
you-
and
you
want
to
ask
a
question
just
tag
me
and
I
will
me
or
one
of
the
team
will
unmute
you.
We
just
mute
people
who
are
making
noise
during
so.
A
No,
but
it
if
I
mute
them,
it
only
mutes
it
for
me.
If
I
server
mute
it
mutes
for
everyone
and
we're
recording
the
call,
so
we
want
to
make
sure
that
we
there's
not
a
whole
bunch
of
noise
for
our
recording
bot
so
that
we
know
that,
like
it's,
it's
it's
for
us,
it's
not
for
you
like
just
tag
me
I'll,
unmute,
you,
if
you
have
a
question
but
okay,
donovan
has
a
question
here.
A
People
are
focused
on
floor
prices,
those
bills
earlier.
The.
A
A
A
Okay,
okay:
people
are
focused
on
the
floor
prices
and
I
think
the
floor
on
os
is
the
standard.
How
can
universe
become
the
go-to
site
for
people
to
determine
the
floor
value
of
their
nft?
Okay?
A
So
I
can
actually
answer
this
question
because
I
think
this
has
a
lot
to
do
with,
like
just
like
liquidity
competition
in
the
same
way
that,
like
dexes
and
sec
and
centralized
exchanges
like
work,
you
know
there's
arbitrage
opportunities
in
finance,
that's
just
how
financial
markets
work,
like
people
do
stuff
called
triangular
arbitraging
in
finance,
where
they
literally
will
let
bots
trade
three
different
currencies
to
make
a
profit,
there's
always
going
to
be
different
floor
prices.
A
I
think
openc
has
has
that
niche
right
now
or
people
think
that
the
floor
price
on
openc
is
the
floor
price
in
general.
But
even
last
week
we
had
a
we
had
an
ama
and
algae
even
brought
up
like
those
relics
that
people
were
buying
on
open
c
like
you
can
eat
you
buy
them
cheaper
on
nifty,
so
like
while
open
seas,
sometimes
like
everyone's
like
okay,
like
yeah,
I
can
see
the
floor
price
on
open,
but
there
are
other
marketplaces
where
you
can
get
really
good
prices
of
these
nfts.
A
So,
in
my
opinion,
like
I
think
it's
a
personal
opinion
that
people
think
that
the
floor
price
is
on
openc,
because
everyone's
going
there
but
realistically
open
c
is
not
the
flies.
The
price
is
the
lowest
listed
nft
on
the
entire
market,
and
it
depends.
It
just
depends
on
where
you
can
get
that
set
and
what
place
they
listed
on
the
price
they.
If
you
know
it's,
it's
no
different
than
just
you
know.
If
I
want
to.
A
A
It's
it's
the
same,
as
is
just
the
same
as
going
to
the
store
like
if
I'm
gonna
go
to
the
store
and
buy
milk
like
I
can
go,
I
could
I
can
go
to
publix
and
maybe
spend
a
little
bit
more
on
a
gallon
of
milk
go
to
walmart
or
hell.
I
can
get
milk
delivered
to
my
house,
like
it
kind
of
depends
on
the
situation
or
you
know
it's
just
that's
just
how
it
is
realistically,
but
yo.
So
trevor
actually
wants
to
come
up
or
I
made
it
stop
trevor,
but.
G
Hey
hey
guys,
I'm
trevor
cto
over
at
graviton,
formerly
known
as
multiverse.
G
I've
been
an
engineer
and
architect
for
20
years
now
I've
been
with
barnbridge
and
universe
since
the
beginning,
I
might
know
some
of
you
on
discord,
but
I'm
not
as
active
on
there
anymore
since
I'm
usually
weeds
in
the
weeds
with
all
the
development
work.
I've
been
doing
so
I'd
like
to
discuss
a
couple
of
differences
between
our
existing
scraper
as
it
is
deployed
today
and
some
of
the
other
scrapers
in
the
industry
and
the
improvements
that
we've
made
on
this.
G
So
currently
the
scraper
that
you
see
the
results
of
when
you
go
to
the
my
nfts
page,
so
that's
currently
depending
on
several
apis,
namely
openc
and
morales,
and
there's
a
lot
of
issues
with
that,
because
you
get
into
throttling
rate
limiting,
and
it's
also
not
built
in
such
a
way
that
it's
very
scalable.
G
So
we
have
vastly
improved
this,
so
the
current
scraper
is
built
on
microservice
architecture.
It's
all
running
on
kubernetes
in
such
a
way
that
it's
massively
scalable
so
anytime
we'd
like
to
add
additional
nodes.
We
just
spin
up
more
replicas
and
we
have
more
power
going
through
that
scraper.
G
It
also
does
not
depend
on
any
kind
of
external
api
whatsoever,
we're
only
using
pure
blockchain
data
from
a
full
ethereum
node.
So
we
never
get
into
the
situation
where
we
get
rate
limited.
So
those
are
just
a
couple
of
the
core
differences,
but
overall,
it's
extremely
well
architected.
G
It's
built
in
such
a
way
that
it's
modular
so
we'll
be
able
to
use
this
for
erc20s
as
well
as
721s
1155s
and
anything
in
between
we're,
also
considering
possibly
making
this.
G
G
So
it's
not
just
looking
at
certain
wallets
or
certain
contracts,
it's
getting
every
single
nft
from
the
entire
blockchain
since
nfts
were
created,
and
even
before
that
it
even
supports
crypto
punks.
So
it's
it's
essentially
all-inclusive.
What
that
means
is
that,
as
soon
as
you
go
to
universe
and
join
up
your
wallet,
you
don't
need
to
wait.
It's
already
going
to
have
all
of
that
data
ready
to
go.
G
So
I
think
this
is
pretty
exciting.
It's
a
it's
a
huge
victory
for
us,
we're
very
proud
of
it,
and
I
look
forward
to
unleashing
this
to
the
public
and
letting
you
guys
go
crazy.
A
Yeah
we're
super
excited
about
the
scraper.
I
mean
honestly,
we
probably
could
have
released
paper
october,
but
if
it
wasn't
because
of
our
friends
at
fluffworld
for
making
such
badass
nfps
that
play
music
videos
just
like
being
able
to
swap
traits
and
do
this
crazy
stuff,
but
luckily
they
were
able
to
drop
that
technology
to
help
us
build
an
even
better
scraper.
A
So
shout
out
to
you
know
the
developers
out
in
new
zealand
who
have
you
know,
helped
us
with
getting
the
fluffs
onto
the
scraper.
We
appreciate
you
guys
and
shout
out
to.
G
Aaron's
team,
too,
for
helping
with
that
and
so
I'll
share
a
little
bit
of
statistics
with
you.
The
scraper
has
been
running
for
about
16
hours
now
and
it
has
already
scraped,
261,
000,
nft
tokens
and
335
000
nft
transfers
and
that's
in
under
24
hours.
So
it's
it's
highly
optimized,
it's
extremely
fast!
It's
extremely
robust,
and
it's
it's
great.
A
All
right,
I'm
just
scrolling
through
some
more
questions
if
any
they
want
to
come
up
and
and
ask
them
feel
free
gunner
asks.
Is
there
a
limit
token
per
time
frame?
No
question
mark.
I'm
not
really
sure
what
you
are
referring
to
on
that
question.
Maybe
if
you
want
to
come
up
and
maybe
like
re-ask
that
or
like
read
like
I'm,
not
really,
not
necessarily
sure
what
you
mean
by
that
all
right,
donovan
has
another
question,
or
it's
actually
don
boven.
I
actually
have
always
been
reading
his
name
wrong.
A
F
I
mean,
obviously
let
me
let
me
say
something
this
exactly
right
here
is
a
great
example
of
how
the
top
200
project
airdrop
would
incentivize
people
in
a
way
like
people
who
have
already
paid
that
gas
fee
to
list,
because
I
don't
know
if
all
of
you
know
this,
because
I
know
there's
a
lot
of
people
listening
who
are
giving
opinions
that
don't
really
trade
nfts
every
single
time.
You
trade,
a
new
collection,
you
have
to
pay
a
gas
fee,
so
that's
part
of
why
it
would
be
smart
to
incentivize
people
to
migrate.
F
Their
listings
is
because
it
would
kind
of
cover
this
gas
fee
that
they're
getting
charged
so
back
to
that
is
that
a
good
way,
in
my
opinion,
to
get
the
fluff
people
trading
on
universe,
is
to
offer
this
incentivization
for
migrating
your
listings,
and
then
there
are
contracts
approved,
so
they
can
always
list
moving
forward
for
no
extra
gas
fee,
and
it's
as
simple
as
that.
E
E
So
there's
just
a
lot
of
ways
that
we
can
iterated
earlier
that,
like
we,
don't
really
need
to
focus
to
make
sure
our
market
functioning
like
flight
creams
before
we
want
to
incentivize
people
to
even
come
to
come
there.
You
know
so
there's
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
leeway
and
work
around
that
we
can
do
with
these.
But
the
listings
and
we're
eventually
going
to
have
to
incentivize
people
is
how
we
feel
as
a
as
a
core
team
to
come
to
universe.
G
E
G
Yeah,
so
another
idea
that
we've
discussed
is
possibly
allowing
people
to
stake
their
xyz
tokens
to
get
a
discount
on
the
gas
prices
similar
to
what
one
inch
does
so
like
on
one
inch.
G
If
you
stake
a
certain
amount
of
one
inch
tokens,
you
get
a
certain
tier
of
your
gases
refunded
back,
and
then
I
think
another
thing
that
we
might
want
to
explore
is
possibly
incentivizing
the
first
sale
of
an
nfp
that
was
minted
on
the
platform,
so
that
would
incentivize
people
to
use
the
platform
and
mint
quality
nfts
on
here,
and
then
they
would
get
an
incentive
for
the
first
sale,
but
only
the
first
sale,
because
otherwise
you
get
into
wash
trading.
Situations
like
you
have
on,
looks
rare,
yeah
and.
A
A
F
The
key
what
trevor
was
saying
is
like
like
how
he
pointed
out.
We
couldn't
like,
even
if
instantly
when
he
says
these
ideas,
like
the
it's
good,
that
we
do
this,
but
we
just
want
to
make
sure
nothing
can
be
exploited.
F
You
know
what
I
mean
like
these
ideas,
sound
cool,
but
at
the
end
of
the
day,
you've
got
to
do
something
that
can't
be
scammed
and
exploited
like
we
would
love
to
incentivize
every
single
person
to
move
their
listing,
but
then
that
creates
the
window
for
people
to
like
create
new
projects
and
wallets,
and
we
don't
want
anyone
scamming
or
us
or
the
community.
F
So
the
only
way
we
have
to
place
limits
in
an
extreme
measure,
in
my
opinion,
to
do
any
type
of
airdrop
without
it.
Turning
into
this
ponzi
nomiks
that
you
guys
were
talking
about,
because
we
definitely
100
want
to
avoid
that
completely
like
we
don't
want
it
to
be.
Where
like
like,
like,
like
you
guys,
are
right.
F
We
don't
have
to
do
this
airdrop,
we
don't
need
the
fluff
people
or
any
other
community
to
list
on
universe,
because
this
is
really
early
in
nfts
like
we
are
so
early
in
this
space
like
if
we
just
have
a
marketplace
existing
that
has
these
better
tools
and
opportunities
for
artists.
That's
enough
for
over
time
for
us
to
organically
just
have
a
community,
but
in
my
opinion
it
does.
F
It
will
not
in
any
way
hurt
for
us
to
notify
and
incentivize
these
people
who
have
been
trading
nfts
and
take
the
space
seriously
and
are
still
holding
these
expensive
nfts
incentivizing.
Those
collections,
in
my
opinion,
would
only
only
help
this
space.
Now,
I'm
not
talking
about
I'm
talking
about
the
all-time
best
nfts,
I'm
not
talking
about
go
on
openc
right
now
and
look
at
the
stats
page
and
those
are
the
ones
that
are
going
to
get
the
air
drop.
F
I'm
talking
about
like
the
top
200
all-time,
maybe
even
narrow
some
of
those
out,
so
that
it's
not
like
some
fugazi
like
we
obviously
wouldn't
airdrop,
every
decentraland,
nft
or
every
wearable.
You
know
what
I
mean
every
foundation,
nft
that
wouldn't
make
any
sense.
You
know
what
I
mean.
It
would
only
be
like
these
smaller
projects
that
are
this
rarity
and
are
made
to
match
the
market
and
the
market
is
avatar
profile
pictures.
Then
that's
not
really
a
debate.
That's
a
fact!
That's
what
the
market
wants.
Metaverse
land
is
just
a
separate
thing.
F
I
don't
think
it
would
work
where
we
were
incentivizing
metaverse
lane
holders
just
because
of
how
much
how
much
land
there
is,
but
yeah
finding
some
way
to
incentivize
these
and
honestly
people
should
be
renting
their
metaverse
land.
They
should
be
holding
it
and
running
their
vet
over
slant
on
entered
out
anyway,
but
yeah
incentivizing.
These
top
200,
like
profile
picture
projects,
in
my
opinion,
is
a
smart
thing,
because
the
munich,
the
communities
are
super
positive.
F
Most
of
them
are
like
pretty
organic
and
they're
all
diamond
hands
like
for
the
most
part,
especially
the
top
200,
so
yeah.
In
my
opinion,
that's
just
a
super
good
way
to
kind
of
grow
the
community
with
people
who
are
actually
care
about
caring
about
nfts
and-
and
you
know
what
I'm
saying-
that's
just
it's
just
that
simple,
like
the
xyz
token,
is
a
governance
token.
F
A
So
next
thanks
al
next
question
is
from
jb
or
jbr.
He's
asking
us
what
thing
we
use
I'll
I'll
message
you
is,
that
is
that
aj,
because
if
so,
yes,
you're
still
in
here,
yo
okay.
B
A
I'm
not
sure
I
I
think
tyler
and
troy
left
are.
We
are
we
still
doing
an
ama
tomorrow,
because
I
honestly
would
like
love
to
give
you
like
10
minutes
to
talk
about
what
you
guys
are
working
on.
You
know,
because
I
saw
your
question
and
I
just
yeah
so
take
it
away.
Dude.
D
Okay,
hello,
guys,
I'm
aj,
I
am
the
founder
of
heroes
along
with
my
team.
Mr
tranquilidad
is
around
here.
Joanna
is
here
as
well
and
ela
is
here.
We
created
the
first
culturally
influenced
generative
series.
D
It's
called
hiveros,
it's
based
on
the
culture
of
puerto
rico,
and
we
created
this
because
there's
a
big
demand
on
the
market
for
people
that
are
not
currently
participating
in
the
nft
space
that
would
love
to
participate,
because
currently,
the
the
nft
space
most
of
the
sales
are
happening
between
the
like
top
five
percent
of
people
that
are
actually
in
the
space
and
not
many
people
are
looking
into
ways
into
integrating
communities
that
want
to
participate
in
the
nft
ecosystem,
but
don't
know
where
to
start
so
we
created
it
came
out
of
a
hagathon
the
metabolism
here
in
puerto
rico,
and
we
launched
it
during
the
hackathon.
D
Usually
during
a
hackathon
you,
you
just
present
the
idea,
but
we
launched
the
whole
thing
and
then
we
we
did
some
brainstorming
in
order
to
make
the
the
elected
units
we
appealed
to
the
people
from
here
and
right
now,
half
of
the
of
the
holders.
It
was
their
first
nft
and
we're
working
on
replicating
this
around
the
world.
The
the,
as
I
said
before,
the
sixth
concept,
culturally
influenced
generative
series.
D
We
want
to
create
communities
around
the
world
in
order
to
do
to
push
the
adoption
from
the
ground
up
instead
of
like
top
to
bottom,
and
when
I
say
talk
to
adam
is
that
the
people
that
got
early
on
the
nft
space,
they
might
might
have
been
at
the
right
place
at
the
right
time
and
they
just
stay
on
the
top
and
just
buy
nfts
to
show
that
they
can
just
purchase
them
because
they
are
expensive
and
the
the
from
the
ground
up.
D
Adoption
that
we
are
proposing
is
connecting
with
different
people
in
different
regional
locations.
So
there's
teams
around
the
world
that
are
pushing
adoption.
I
mean,
when
I
say,
option
from
the
ground,
though
I'm
very.
D
We're
creating
a
balance
between
the
the
virtual
and
digital
events
and
metaverso
events.
We
have
a
a
small
umbrella
gallery
that
we
do
events
like
every
week
or
every
other
week
and
then
we're
also
connecting
with
entrepreneurs,
business
owners,
restaurant
owners
in
order
to
to
be
able
to
to
really
really
get
to
the
masses,
because
I
mean
people
on
the
internet
that
know
about
nfts
are
just
a
portion
of
all
the
possible
people
that
could
participate
in
the
ecosystem
next
week.
D
On
monday,
we
have,
we
have
the
the
reveal
of
our
cha,
which
is
a
physical
token
that
is
going
to
serve
for
so
people
can
authenticate
that
they
own
an
ft,
and
then
we
give
them
this
this
physical
token.
D
So
they
can
participate
in
the
ecosystem
and
then
it
would
be
harder
for
for
people
to
to
try
to
game
the
system,
because
not
everyone
understands
like
made
them
ask
someone
to
push
put
a
picture
of
their
nft
on
their
metamask
and
then
and
then
trick
the
cashier,
for
example,
because
at
this
at
this
event
that
we
have
on
on
monday,
people
that
show
their
token
are
going
to
be
able
to
redeem
a
free
burger
and
we
have
other
other
different
benefits
with
other
companies
and
and
businesses,
and
we
we're
really
working
hard
on
connecting
with
the
people
on
a
local
level,
because
that's
why
we
think
which
is
going
to
be
able
to
push
the
adoption
globally
another
another.
D
One
of
our
benefits
right
now
is
that
every
month,
people
that
hold
one
of
our
entities,
the
hiwaro
participate
in
our
our
monthly
art
drop
from
different
puerto
rican.
Artists
that
are
that
are
that,
may
they
might
be
new
in
the
ecosystem,
they
might
have
they.
D
They
might
have
been
traditional
artists
before
and
not
many
people
know
them
yet,
and
then
it's
very
difficult
for
for
artists
to
do
their
art
to
do
their
promotion
to
their
marketing
to
to
run
the
social
medias,
and
so
any
holder
of
hiro
will
be
able
to
claim,
for
example,
on
the
on
for
for
january,
we
have
the
three
kings
day,
saturday,
that
we
got
from
spain
and
and
we
we
had
eight
pieces
made
by
10
artists,
because
three
artists
went
worked
in
one
piece
on
a
collab
and
then
over
200
holders
were
able
to
to
to
just
go
to
the
website
and
get
like
one
nft.
D
I
mean
eight
nfts
per
hiberno
that
they
had
and
a
reason
why
that
we
are
doing
this.
Since
we
are
like
all
about
that
option,
it
is
important
for
people
to
have
a
material
to
give
away
for
a
low
price
and
that's,
for
example,
someone
that
gets
that
has
three
hero
at
us.
For
example,
they
would
end
up
with
24
entities
and
their
their
our
fts
run
on
polygon,
because
we're
we're
targeting
the
people
that
are
not
currently
participating
in
the
ecosystem.
D
So
telling
someone
that
they're
gonna
pay
as
much
or
more
of
gas
than
the
nft
cost
wouldn't
make
much
sense.
But
this
allows
people
to
just
send
energies
to
other
people
and
then
start
pushing
the
adoption
like
from
the
ground
up
and
for
this.
For
this
month
we
have
the
the
the
the
valentine's
drop
is
gonna.
D
D
So
I'm
going
to
take
this
opportunity
to
to
let
anyone
know
that
if
you
guys
are
interested
in
creating
a
six
team
reached
out
to
us,
because
the
the
main
benefit
of
of
creating
this
six
team
on
different
regions
is
that
the
artist
has
a
chance
to
do
art
for
like
their
initial
layers
and
then
benefit
from
from
from
the
revenue.
That
is
that
the
team,
the
whole
team
gets
and
when
I
say
a
team,
the
artist
will
is
going
to
work
on
the
art.
D
But
then
you
have
people
that
are
working
on
social
media.
You
have
people
have
people
working
in
connecting
with
other
businesses,
so
we
we
take
out
many
of
the
responsibilities
that
are
and
if
the
artists
currently
have
that
they
have
to
do
all
of
them
by
themselves
and
create
a
product
from
it.
So
they
have
more
time
to
work
on
their
own
art.
D
So
after
they
they
finish
their
their
layers
and
it's
and
it's
launched
they
can
do
like
backup
art
or
to
help
to
help
for
like
promotions
and
things,
but
they
don't
have
to
be
like
constantly
making
all
the
time
in
this
ecosystem
that
is
so
competitive
and
also
the
the
supply
of
of
nfps.
It's
it's,
it's
almost
infinite,
and
then
the
demand
is
it's
quite
limited.
D
So,
by
creating
a
six
you're
creating
a
product
that
is
not
competing
for
the
most
part,
with
the
with
the
current
supply,
because
it's
a
unique
product
and
since
it's
going
to
have
different
leaders
and
different
teams
around
the
world,
they
can
actually
push
adoption
forward.
And
then
these
teams
end
up
becoming
like
quote-unquote
authorities
on
their
regions,
because
since
they
are
connecting
with
artists,
they're
helping
them
out,
they're
they're.
A
And
this
even
goes
back
to
like
what
troy
was
talking
about
like
tyler
was
saying
like
troy,
went
and
spoke
today.
A
lot
of
the
stuff
that
like
aj,
is
working
on
is
part
of
what
like
troy
and
spoke
about
today
like
teaching.
A
So
I
mean-
I
know
you
guys
know
but
like
some
of
us
have
actually
moved
to
puerto
rico
and,
like
part
of
what
we've
been
doing
is
like
aj
also
has
been
trying
to
teach
people
about
the
industry,
because
there's
so
much
there's
so
many
ways
to
v
to
benefit
and
aj
has
really
been
helping.
Artists
on
the
island
bring
like
show
them
like
hey,
like
look,
you
can
start
a
polygon
wallet,
you
don't
need
you
don't
need
to
spend
150.
A
That
was
something
really
interesting
that
I
thought
they
did.
That
was
very
easy
and
they've
had
very
good
success,
and
I
mean
I
think
the
biggest
point
that
aj
said
was
like
a
lot
of
those
jabarros
that
people
the
hebrews.
I
still
need
to
get
a
little
bit
better
at
spanish.
A
I
still
say
ja,
instead
of
I'm
still
learning
my
my
js,
but
the
fact
that
those
those
nfts
that
those
people
bought
were
their
first
nft.
That
is
the
whole
point
of
this.
This
culturally
influenced
generative
series
where
we
can
have
people
around
the
world
being
like
okay,
like
I'm
from
japan
or
like
I'm
from
you
know
or
like
from
florida
like
florida's
like
is,
is
big.
It
could
literally
be
its
own
country
in
a
way
like
florida
has
its
own
culture.
A
Japan
has
its
own
culture,
china
has
its
own
culture,
and
what
aj
really
wants
to
do
is
get
in
touch
with
everyone
around
the
world,
and
we
can
start
culturally
culture
nfts
that
people
are
like.
A
Okay,
like
one
of
the
biggest
things
that
someone
has
said
to
me
is
since
I
moved
to
there's
actually
like
10
times
as
many
puerto
ricans
in
new
york
city
than
there
are
in
in
puerto
rico,
like
puerto
rico,
a
lot
of
people
have
moved
out
depending
on
their
reasons,
but
they
still
love
their
culture
like
some
of
the
puerto
rican.
People
that
I've
met
here
are
are
so
passionate
about
puerto
rico.
So,
like
you
know,
a
lot
of
people
want
to
like
there's
this
american
dream.
A
People
want
to
move
to
america,
but
they
still,
you
know,
relate
back
with
the
people
back
home
and
not
only
is
that
super
powerful,
but
teaching
people
in
in
some
of
these
other
countries
where,
like
you
know,
crypto,
isn't
as
easy
to
access
you're
teaching
them
about
nfts,
you
onboard
them
on
lt
gas,
efficient
and
that's
a
whole
point
of
crypto
right
like
let's
onboard
everybody,
let's
teach
people
around
the
world,
let's,
let's
bank,
the
unbank
and
let's
make
a
good
economy
that.
D
D
It
doesn't
have
to
be
about
a
state
or
a
country
because,
for
example,
right
now
we
have
two
teams
in
new
york.
One
is
working
on
the
six
of
new
york.
Anyone
that's
in
new
york
that
I
want
to
reach
out.
I
can
connect
you
with
them,
and
then
we
have
another
one
that
is
made
by
from
puerto
rico.
That
was
mostly
raised
there
and
he's
creating
the
new
eurekans
version
of
it.
We
also
have
a
team
in
slovakia.
We
also
have
a
team
in
guatemala.
D
We
also
have
a
team
in
venezuela
and
we
we
need
to
keep
building
this
because
the
part
of
building
teams
and
doing
the
brainstorming
for
the
trades
can
run
in
parallel.
While
we
do,
we
do
everything
else
and
then,
when,
when
they're,
when
everything
is
ready,
we
help
them
launch
the
contract.
I
can
give
you
more
details
later,
but
if
you
want
to
be
part
of
this
cultural
nft
revolution
just
go
to
discord
dot
here,
that's
gay!
I
can
just
check
my
my
about
yeah.
D
A
Ft
project
like
this,
and
they
want
to
be
involved.
We
want
this
to
be
a
global
project
and
part
of
the
reason
why
we
we
think
that
this
is
something
this
is
like.
So
on
ethos
with
with
nfts
and
crypto
is
like
we're
all
gonna
make
it
in
this
whole
community
that
we
can
build
around
the
world.
A
I
think
that
you
know
there's
a
massive
amount
of
people
that
think
that
the
people
who
are
benefiting
from
nfts
are
americans,
but
the
fact
of
the
matter
is
anyone
can
benefit
this
from
this
technology
and
I
think
the
the
people
who
can
benefit
from
it.
The
most
are
the
artists
around
the
world.
Like
I
know
we
we've
talked
about
starving
artists
like
that
whole.
You
know
like
we.
We
really
hope
that
nfts
ends
that
and
that
we
can
create
just
technology.
That's
going
to
empower
it
so
yo
aj.
A
Thank
you
so
much
dude
for
coming
up
and
I
think
we're
going
to
have
an
an
ama
with
the
hebros
team
and
and
please,
if
anyone
is
interested,
please
reach
out
to
me
or
reach
out
to
aj
his
I'm
gonna
just
say
his.
His
name
is
jbr214
he's
in
the
chat
right
now
and
if
I
don't
respond,
just
tag
me
in
in
the
discord,
because
I
have
my
dms
turned
on,
but
you
guys
can
tag
me
and
I'll
get
you
in
touch
with
them.
Dude.
A
Thank
you
so
much
and
I
think
we're
gonna
have
an
amateur
just
on
hebrews
and
cultural
influences
generative
projects,
because
we
really
think
that
this
is.