Minting Your First NFT: A Beginner’s Guide to Creating an NFT

I’m no Emily Dickinson, but the latest developments in internet culture – excuse me, Web 3 culture – has me thinking I can shill my grad school poems for 1 ETH ($3,000) a pop.

And on January 20, 2022, I did. After all, imposter syndrome doesn’t have a place in a burgeoning industry where even founders admit to being in the midst of a learning curve. If I were a creator during Gutenberg’s era, I like to think I wouldn’t have passed up the chance to play around with the printing press. Why should NFTs be different?

When I first heard about non-fungible tokens (NFTs) in April 2021, I was immediately thrilled by the high-level concept of them: Artists, seemingly overnight, now had a way to own their own work and determine their own royalties. I needed to hear more.

Being a journalist, I was fortunate that my first conversation about NFTs was with Whale Shark, a prominent collector and founder of the WHALE token who once spent 22 ETH on a one-of-a-kind pair of sneakers.

Ahead, I share what I’ve learned since that first NFT conversation and my chats with dozens of creators and founders in the blockchain world. As they say in crypto, time moves so fast. One month is basically a year, and it took me about seven months – essentially one whole dog year – to finally work up the nerve to put one of my poems on a blockchain. I’d like to make it easier for you.

Here’s a step-by-step guide on how to mint your first NFT using OpenSea, a popular NFT platform among first-time creators. (Great alternative platforms also exist, which we’ll touch on below.)

Step 1: Decide on the concept

Outside of my financial journalistic work, I have a growing affinity for all things astrology-based. Looking at my recent astrology chart with astrologer Noah Frere, I noticed that Juno was very active. In light of this, I decided to base my first NFT collection on the tumultuous relationship between Juno and Jupiter – two gods from Roman mythology. And after a great conversation with my business coach, Lisa Fabrega, I knew I wanted to explore the tension between love and duty through the lens of devotion.

I therefore decided to name my poetry alter ego – every creator needs one, right? – “Juno Muse.”

With my concept nailed down, I had my marching orders: Resurrect my old poems and write several new ones. Then, learn how to mint them on a blockchain.

Step two: Decide on the platform

The tech skills required to mint NFTs on OpenSea are comparable to the ones I used to sign up for Myspace in 2006.

“There’s a big misconception that you have to be technical in order to participate in crypto,” said Denise Schaefer, co-founder of the blockchain education platform Surge. “But I look at NFTs as a fun entryway into the space that doesn’t require coding skills when minting in marketplaces like OpenSea or Rarible.”

Here are some beginner-friendly NFT platforms where first-time creators can mint:

OpenSea

Blockchains used: Ethereum and Polygon

OpenSea is popular and easy to use for all types of NFTs. While the Ethereum blockchain is notorious for charging high service fees, or “gas”, OpenSea now has a lazy mint option. The creator can upload their artwork, “mint” it to their profile and list it for sale without paying gas fees. When the collector buys it, they will pay the gas fees.

What you’ll need to get started:

An ETH wallet (e.g. MetaMask, Coinbase or dozens of others)

Creator fees:

2.5% of your sale

Learn more:

Visit the OpenSea resource page.

Rarible

Blockchains used: Ethereum, Flow and Tezos

Creators can use Rarible to mint NFT creations, whether they are books, music albums, digital art or movies. There are some fun features, such as the ability to show a “sneak peek” of your creation to everybody who comes to Rarible but limit the full project to purchasers only.

Rarible considers itself a community-owned NFT marketplace. Using Rarible’s unique token (ERC-20 RARI) makes you an owner of the Rarible project. This is a cool feature, but it was a little over my head for my first mint. I hope to learn more about this.

What you’ll need to get started:

A wallet compatible with your choice of blockchain.

Creator fees:

Vary depending on the blockchain you use, but the option for free minting exists.

Learn more:

Read the Rarible FAQs

Holaplex

Blockchain used: Solana

While Solana has mixed reviews from Ethereum loyalists, artists and creators report that the Solana blockchain is super fast, has high performance and is cost-effective with negligible fees. Solana’s speed and efficiency also cuts down on energy usage, therefore giving it a reputation as a new, less environmentally damaging, alternative to Ethereum.

What you’ll need to get started:

Phantom wallet and Arconnect Wallet

Creator fees:

Reportedly 0.000005 SOL ($0.00025) per transaction. Fees can fluctuate, but they are almost zero.

Learn more:

Check out this Artist’s Guide to Solana and Holaplex and visit the Holaplex.

For Solana tl;dr it’s basically:

1. Establish an account with a crypto exchange like @coinbase, convert small amount of usd to sol ($5 would do)
2. Establish @phantom wallet in @brave or Chrome
3. Move funds from exchange to browser wallet
4. Initialize store @holaplex!

— Jackie◎ (@hackingbutlegal) January 16, 2022

Objkt

Blockchain used: Tezos

Originally created as a secondary marketplace, objkt now allows artists and creators to mint directly on its platform. It’s also popular among literary NFT creators and used by theVerseVerse co-founders Sasha Stiles and Ana Maria Caballero.

Minting is now live on https://t.co/wErtxZVJLY. Artists can create collections and directly mint into them.

Creating a collection will deploy your own smart contract on the @Tezos blockchain. ⛓️🖥️

Take a look at @pointline_‘s new collection: https://t.co/rowggJ0y4E pic.twitter.com/2qxIrTytBV

— objkt.com (@objktcom) November 11, 2021

What you’ll need to get started:

Choose from these compatible wallets:

SpireTemple WalletGalleonKukai WalletUmamiAirGap Wallet

Creator fees:

2.5% for all successful sales

Learn more:

Visit the objkt website and/or discord server.

Step three: Connect and build community

Get ready to tweet and DM. If you want to start making NFTs, you’ll need to dust off your Twitter account. You’ll also need to join Discord, a Slack-like chat platform for gamers and crypto lovers. Expect to get most of your information and build authentic relationships through these types of communication channels.

Read more: Crypto Discord: Where to Go, What to Know

When you’re ready to sell your NFTs, expect your community to be your number-one marketing resource. It sounds a little cliche, but you don’t need to spend a lot of money on sophisticated marketing tactics to create a successful project.

“Regardless of how low or high the market is, the community is so enthusiastic and constantly tagging our project in different things constantly talking about it,” said Maliha Abidi, whose Women Rise NFT collection launched in November 2021 and sold out in 50 days, generating 2,000 ETH of trading volume in the process.

“We have not put in even $1 in marketing so far, but we were literally just featured in Vanity Fair yesterday and today in Rolling Stone,” Abidi told CoinDesk on Jan. 19.

Biggest week at Women Rise! ☀️

We sold out, reached 5400 unique holders, achieved 1900 ETH in trading volume,reached 24k on Twitter, reached 12k on discord, are trending on #32 on @rarible and @opensea, featured on Rarible homepage, & it is all thanks to our amazing community 🥰 pic.twitter.com/BvcAWNvP1I

— Women Rise NFT (@WomenriseNFT) January 19, 2022

Even 1-of-1 creators – artists who mint unique, single pieces of art, compared to algorithmically generated avatars that people use as Twitter profile pictures – seemingly trust that making friendships can go a long way.

“We interact with each other every day. You’re going to see your collectors in a Twitter space or if there’s good alpha information, we share it with each other,” said Thao Nguyen, an artist who pivoted from making Etsy creations to NFT artwork on OpenSea in 2021. “It’s a very giving relationship, and I absolutely love it.”

Step four: Create your art

To start turning my poems into art, I asked my mom to mail me an old iPad she wasn’t using and signed up for an online illustration class at the Baltimore Academy of Illustration. I bought an Apple Pencil, downloaded Photoshop for iPads, and plugged in my Yeti microphone (which I already had) to practice recording audio clips in iMovie and GarageBand. I dug out my old poems from grad school, walked around Manhattan thinking of ideas and bought a notebook to start scribbling.

Every creator has their own process, but no matter what, you need to think about how your art will translate digitally. Follow these guidelines to make your first NFT:

Use materials and tools you already have.Invest in new technology or knowledge as needed.Find other creators and learn from each other.Consider the audience you think will like your work and keep them in mind as you create.Choose whether you want your NFTs to have visual, audio or written components – or all three.Pick a file type. OpenSea accepts JPG, PNG, GIF, SVG, MP4, WEBM, MP3, WAV, OGG, GLB and GLTF.Think about the file size. OpenSea’s limit is 100 MB.Factor in accessibility – I chose to have subtitles along with my spoken-word poems so that they could be enjoyed by as many people as possible, including people with visual and/or hearing impairments.

After some experimenting, I ended up scrapping the graphics I created in Photoshop and instead used Canva to make a simple title image and subtitles for my poem. I then recorded myself reading the poem along with the slides.

I’m not the most talented visual artist. But I gave myself permission to play around – and I don’t intend to stop experimenting. The advice I’ve gotten is this: Don’t pigeonhole yourself too soon or limit your notions of what’s possible. Unless you have a clear aesthetic like Abidi, an experienced painter, consider NFTs your opportunity to try new things. NFTs are a new art form, so let your message translate to the new medium.

Step five: Mint and share

In OpenSea, the minting process is so easy I kept waiting for a clown to jump out and tell me I’d been tricked.

It’s as simple as uploading your files, inputting your collection’s description and making your profile, determining your royalties (for later, when your art is sold in a secondary marketplace) and completing your listing.

Note the accepted file types:

I chose to mint my first NFT on Polygon, which had no fees.

Once you mint your NFT, you will see it on your profile. Blockchain data is public and accessible by anyone. Your NFT’s buying and selling history will be available forever, helping you and prospective investors track its price.

“Etherscan is where you can see all the transactions that have happened in the Ethereum blockchain,” Schaefer told CoinDesk. “It is specific to all transactions that are occurring in the Ethereum network, and in and out of the network. Everybody having access to these public records is what allows for blockchains to operate without a central authority and without a bank.”

But you might not want the whole world to know how much money you have and how much money you’re transacting, said Schaefer. This is where pseudonyms and having multiple wallets – totally legal in the blockchain world – come in.

The final step: Selling your NFT

After minting, it’s time to list your NFT for sale. I opted to keep things simple and list mine for 1 ETH, or $2,922.42 at the time of minting.

My 1 ETH price will remain on my Juno Muse OpenSea profile until Feb. 20, or whenever someone takes my NFT off the market.

In the meantime, I plan to keep experimenting with how I price my NFTs. I plan on releasing my old grad school poems, and, to make Juno proud, I plan to keep writing poems on Thursdays, which is ruled by Juno’s love, Jupiter. Maybe, just maybe, this new routine will help me fall in love with NFTs and – most important – my own art again.

Keep Learning: How to Create, Buy and Sell NFTs

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Market Wrap: Bitcoin Stabilizes as Altcoins Underperform

Cryptocurrencies are starting to stabilize after declining sharply over the past week. Some indicators show investor sentiment at extremely bearish levels, which typically precede periods of buying activity. Other technical measures, however, suggest choppy price action could persist over the short term.

Bitcoin returned to above $35,000 and was up 3% over the past 24 hours, versus a 5% decline in SOL and roughly flat performance in ETH over the same period.

Still, it might be too soon to call a price bottom. « I think the determination of a bull/bear market is not as clear as previous cycles, due to the structure of the market changing drastically with institutions entering the space, » Marcus Sotiriou, an analyst at the U.K.-based digital asset broker GlobalBlock, wrote in an email to CoinDesk.

« Now, it is apparent that bitcoin is in a ranging environment (between $29,000 to $69,000 approximately) rather than a trending environment, » Sotiriou wrote.

« Bitcoin’s recovery is a long shot as investors are more keen on the price being stabilized for now, » Alex Axelrod, founder and CEO of Aximetria, a crypto financial services firm, wrote in an email to CoinDesk. Axelrod is monitoring BTC price levels of between $32,000 and $40,000 for confirmation of a breakdown or breakout.

Latest prices

Bitcoin (BTC): $36925, +4.41%

Ether (ETH): $2448, +0.88%

S&P 500 daily close: $4410, +0.28%

Gold: $1842 per troy ounce, +0.56%

Ten-year Treasury yield daily close: 1.74%

Bitcoin, ether and gold prices are taken at approximately 4pm New York time. Bitcoin is the CoinDesk Bitcoin Price Index (XBX); Ether is the CoinDesk Ether Price Index (ETX); Gold is the COMEX spot price. Information about CoinDesk Indices can be found at coindesk.com/indices.

The chart below shows the recent increase in bitcoin’s spot trading volume. Short-term traders have been active despite the uncertainty regarding future price direction.

Short-term holders underwater

Losses are adding up for most short-term bitcoin holders, according to blockchain data.

The chart below indicates that 18% of short-term bitcoin holder supply is at a loss (BTC trading below its average cost basis), which could point to further selling. A similar scenario occurred during the 2018 bear market and subsequent price corrections.

Still, long-term bitcoin holders appear unfazed by the recent price dip. « The proportion of long-term holder supply has actually returned to a modest uptrend, which indicates a general unwillingness for this cohort to liquidate, » Glassnode, a crypto data firm, wrote in a blog post on Monday.

Crypto funds attract fresh capital

Inflows into digital-asset funds last week – after five straight weeks of outflows – suggest investors were taking advantage of the price dip.

Cryptocurrency funds brought in $14.4 million of new investor money during the seven days through Friday, ending a streak of five straight weeks of outflows, according to a report Monday from the digital-asset manager CoinShares.

Last week’s inflows were led by bitcoin-focused funds, which brought in $13.8 million. Meanwhile, ethereum-focused funds suffered $15.6 million of outflows. Read more here.

Altcoin roundup

Solana Slides 17% to lead losses amid crypto market plunge: Major cryptocurrencies fell as much as 17% in 24 hours as the crypto market followed a broader decline in U.S. stock index futures on Monday. Last Friday, traders complained about network congestion on Solana and doubted its ability to attract real capital with that kind of meltdown. Solana has been attractive to large trading shops partly because it has prioritized scale. Still, when the network gets overcrowded, it has shown that it can stall out. Read more here.Luxor tries to keep Proof-of-Work Mechanism on Ethereum: Crypto software and services company Luxor is launching an Ethereum mining pool even as it is planning to abolish mining from its network. The company is working with large institutional miners, including Hut 8 and several retail miners in North America, to provide a U.S.-based Ethereum mining pool, the company said in a statement on Monday, according to Aoyon Ashraf. Read more here.OpenSea bug allows attackers to get massive discount on popular NFTs: A bug on the non-fungible tokens (NFT) marketplace OpenSea has allowed at least three attackers to secure massive discounts on several NFTs and make a huge profit. The bug, which was discovered as early as Dec. 31, allowed the attackers to buy NFTs at older, lower prices, and sell them for a hefty profit, according to Eliza Gkritsi. Read more here.

Relevant news

Coinbase Taps SEC Counsel Thaya Knight to Manage Public Policy TeamBank of America Says US CBDC Would Preserve Dollar’s Status as World’s Reserve CurrencyChinese Government Rejects Metaverse Trademark Applications: ReportSingapore VC Blockchain Founders Raises $75M for New Fund

Other markets

Most digital assets in the CoinDesk 20 ended the day lower.

Largest gainers:

Asset
Ticker
Returns
Sector
Cosmos
ATOM
+17.5%
Smart Contract Platform
Stellar
XLM
+10.9%
Smart Contract Platform
Litecoin
LTC
+9.8%
Currency

Largest losers:

Asset
Ticker
Returns
Sector
Solana
SOL
−3.0%
Smart Contract Platform
Filecoin
FIL
−1.5%
Computing
Polygon
MATIC
−1.2%
Smart Contract Platform

Sector classifications are provided via the Digital Asset Classification Standard (DACS), developed by CoinDesk Indices to provide a reliable, comprehensive, and standardized classification system for digital assets. The CoinDesk 20 is a ranking of the largest digital assets by volume on trusted exchanges.

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JPEGs On Sale, Baby

The global crypto market lost over $1 trillion in value last week as the price of nearly every major token took a precipitous nosedive.

ETH, the native asset of the Ethereum network, is down to around $2,200 for the first time since July. Bitcoin hit a similar six-month low in the $33,000 range. Altcoins SOL, DOT and AVAX are all down around 40% just in the last seven days.

This article is excerpted from The Node, CoinDesk’s daily roundup of the most pivotal stories in blockchain and crypto news. You can subscribe to get the full newsletter here.

With a dip in the market comes a wave of “takes” from crypto’s armchair prognosticators. Depending on whom you trust, these are either short-term macro trends (tech stocks like Peloton and Netflix are way down, too) or the first rumblings of a promised “crypto winter,” the kind of thing last seen during the post-crash environment of 2018.

Well, here’s another take – it’s a bad time to be a day trader, but it’s also a bad time for NFT flippers, whose gains and losses are typically priced in ETH. Even as the price has fallen, the average amount of ETH exchanged for non-fungible tokens in top collections has stayed relatively consistent.

The Consumer Price Index (CPI), which tracks an aggregate price of certain consumer goods, is a useful real-world analog here. People like to think of the CPI as a rough gauge for inflation – when the dollar is worth less, you’d expect dollar-denominated prices to go up. It rose 7% in 2021, through December, in the biggest spike since 1982.

That is to say, you’re probably going to be paying a little more for some of the consumer goods you use everyday.

Somehow, this logic doesn’t seem to apply to crypto’s top NFT collections.

A week ago, the “floor prices” (the lowest listed price for a token in a given NFT collection) for CryptoPunks and the Bored Ape Yacht Club, now the two priciest projects in the space, were 60 ETH and 82 ETH, respectively.

They’ve each crept up a little, from 60 ETH to 66, and 82 ETH to 86 – but these minor increases aren’t doing much to offset the massive dip in the price of ETH, which lost 30% of its value over the past seven days.

See also: The History of HODL

The same goes for other top NFT collections. The floor for Meebits, a 3D collection from the developers of CryptoPunks, has actually dropped over the past week, as has the floor for CyberKongz.

Average sale prices for tokens over the past seven days tell a similar story; minor increases and decreases here and there, but nothing that could really offset the dip.

Gm to everyone who just makes ETH natively within the economy and never even needs to buy the dip 👀 https://t.co/PlLd09bU0B

— dame.eth (@damedoteth) September 7, 2021

So, why is everyone accepting less for these valuable NFTs across the board?

My sense is that it has to do with who’s actually buying this stuff. At this point, CryptoPunks and Bored Apes are the domain of hardcore crypto enthusiasts (VCs, full-time investors) and rich celebrities. Your average ETH trader, maybe a little less risk tolerant, probably isn’t focusing on these collections.

Hardcore ETH people tend to think of ETH on its own terms. Spend enough time in crypto and 1 ETH just starts to look like 1 ETH, as opposed to $2,200.

Gm to everyone who just makes ETH natively within the economy and never even needs to buy the dip 👀 https://t.co/PlLd09bU0B

— dame.eth (@damedoteth) September 7, 2021

If you really believe in the thesis behind NFTs (and, by extension, the ETH backing most of the market), you believe in the viability of the tokens themselves. And if ETH is going up and we’re all going to the moon, you may not care about a short-term price correction.

What looks like a loss today could be seen as a bet on the long-term value of ETH. Nothing’s ever real until you sell, right?

For now, JPEGs are on sale, baby.

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Gucci Taps Toy Brand Superplastic to Drop 10 ‘SuperGucci’ NFTs in February

Italian luxury fashion brand Gucci is the latest to edge its way into Web 3 with the upcoming drop of 10 non-fungible tokens (NFT) beginning Feb. 1.

The NFTs have been created in collaboration with the cult toy brand Superplastic and co-designed by Gucci’s head of design, Alessandro Michele. Each NFT will be given away with a ceramic sculpture handmade in Italy and co-designed by Gucci. The NFT drop will be Gucci’s first.

Superplastic is a company that makes artistic vinyl toys for the collectibles market and has issued NFTs through the Winklevoss-owned Nifty Gateway. Superplastic was launched in 2018 by Kidrobot founder Paul Budnitz and has sold millions of dollars in designer toys and apparel based on characters Janky & Guggimon, Dayzee & Staxx, Kranky, ShüDog.

On Friday, Gucci tweeted about the roadmap and launch of a Discord channel as a place to encourage open conversations with the community about what’s next in the metaverse.

Digital fashion momentum

In May, designer fans were left stunned when a virtual Gucci Dionysus bag was sold on the gaming platform Roblox for 350,000 Robux, or roughly $4,115 at the time. The same physical purse cost $3,400.

Reddit co-founder and VC investor Alexis Ohanian was quick to point out in a tweet, “Remember: this Roblox purse is not an NFT and thus has no value/use/transferability outside the Roblox world – yet it’s worth more than the physical one.”

The Superplastic collaboration seems to represent a change of course.

Read more: Prada, Adidas Launch NFT Project on Polygon

Luxury fashion brands are already making millions of dollars from auctioning NFTs. In September, Dolce & Gabbana launched its NFT collection, Collezione Genesi, which fetched approximately $5.65 million in a sale.

With more fashion brands launching NFTs, many are asking if this is a transformational moment for the fashion industry or merely a bout of trendhopping.

Luxury fashion brand Prada and sportswear giant Adidas announced last week the launch of an NFT project built on the Polygon network that allows fans to contribute their own designs.

Morgan Stanley predicts the total NFT market is expected to grow to $300 billion by 2030 with brands such as Gucci and Balenciaga in the best position to profit from digital collaborations in the metaverse.

So far, the Gucci endeavor does not include an activation in popular open metaverses such as The Sandbox and Decentraland.

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Winklevoss-Owned Gemini Galactic Snags FINRA Broker-Dealer Approval

Gemini Galactic Markets, part of the Winklevoss twins’ crypto conglomerate Gemini, has been approved for FINRA (Financial Industry Regulatory Authority) membership, and with it the ability to operate as a broker-dealer registered with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

The approval allows Gemini Galactic to operate an alternative trading system (ATS), which will facilitate the trading of “digital asset securities,” said Gemini, adding that such assets are subject to U.S. securities laws, like traditional stocks and bonds, and therefore can only be bought and sold through a licensed broker-dealer.

Gemini Galactic Principal John Reinhardt said it remains to be seen exactly what kind of offerings digital asset securities will include. “These securities will initially include private placements and, as the market matures, may include public offerings as well,” Reinhardt said in an email to CoinDesk.

Return of the security token?

Back in 2016–17, tokenized securities and security tokens were all the rage; believers said they would trade on regulated ATS venues and revolutionize existing market infrastructure. A couple of years on, it could be argued the action has moved elsewhere, mostly around cryptocurrencies flowing on public blockchains and non-fungible token (NFT) applications.

But Gemini Galactic appears to be biding its time. The company said it’s “excited to be a first mover” and to help further develop this space.

“The growth of the digital asset securities market and the use of blockchain for securities infrastructure will depend on further clarity from regulators and additional investment by companies such as Gemini,” said Reinhardt via email. “Once there are real use cases, the market will be able to grow, and we are excited to be a pioneer in this space.”

Gemini initially made its broker-dealer application to self-regulatory body FINRA back in mid-2019. To date, the exchange, owned by Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, has gathered an impressive clutch of licenses, approvals and regulatory nods across its various trading and custody divisions.

“Our primary regulatory license is with the NYDFS [New York State Department of Financial Services] for Gemini’s custody and exchange business. We hold other state and federal licenses, where necessary, to operate throughout the United States, and we are registered or our registration is pending to offer our services in a number of foreign jurisdictions, including in Asia and Europe,” Reinhardt said.

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FTX.US lève 400 millions de dollars et atteint une valorisation de 8 milliards de dollars

La branche américaine de FTX, FTX.US, est désormais valorisée à 8 milliards de dollars après avoir levé 400 millions de dollars auprès d’investisseurs tels que SoftBank et Temasek. La plateforme prévoit de renforcer son offre de produits dérivés, d’ajouter le trading d’actions et de fournir une infrastructure pour les jeux NFTs.

L’article FTX.US lève 400 millions de dollars et atteint une valorisation de 8 milliards de dollars est apparu en premier sur Cryptoast.

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Axie Infinity (AXS) : le nombre d’utilisateurs explose !

Compte à rebours Axie Infinity propose un programme de création de nouvelles fonctionnalités sur l’utilisation des Axies (NFT). Tout porte à croire que cette stratégie fonctionne. Le nombre d’utilisateurs d’Axie Infinity explose et le jeu blockchain NFT est en fête. Sous prétexte du Nouvel An chinois, le tigre des play-to-earn prépare les pétards et les feux d’artifice. Lumière sur le programme des festivités !

Axie Infinity (AXS) : un défilé d’annonces

Tout a commencé le 19 janvier. Axie Infinity a alors annoncé ouvrir un programme de projet de développement pour les créateurs de contenu. Chaque programme sélectionné profitera de 5 000 dollars (en AXS) de parrainage.

Sky Mavis, la société qui développe Axie Infinity, dispose d’un fonds de 400 000 dollars (toujours en AXS) pour ce programme. Tout sera étudié : philosophie du projet, gameplay, faisabilité et impact sur les utilisateurs… Dans les critères obligatoires, il faudra bien sûr utiliser les tokens de l’écosystème d’Axie Infinity, AXS et SLP (avec obligation de brûler des SLP dans le mécanisme de jeu, par exemple).

« En bref, l’objectif de ce programme est de renforcer la capacité de notre communauté à créer des expériences et des outils de jeu, tout en gérant les risques (…) »

The Lunacian, journal officiel d’Axie Infinity

Ensuite, à partir du 20 janvier, SkyMavis a proposé aux détenteurs d’Axies de brûler leurs AXS (du 20 janvier au 20 février). En échange, l’utilisateur obtient un NFT décoratif pour les lands, inspiré de la nouvelle année lunaire.

De plus, chaque Axie brûlé génère un ticket de participation à un airdrop. Le premier prix est de 5 jetons AOC. Ce sont des jetons échangeables contre des Origin Axies, les tout premiers Axies disponibles lors des préventes du jeu en 2018. Les 49 autres tickets tirés au sort auront des NFT à collectionner dans les lands d’Axie Infinity.

5 lots à gagner dans le cadre du burn d’AXS – Source : Axie Infinity (Twitter)

Toutes ces fonctionnalités permettent un regain d’intérêt envers l’écosystème d’Axie Infinity.

>> Vos premiers AXS en quelques instants sur la référence des exchanges crypto FTX  (lien affilié) <<

Ronin et Katana : les rois de la parade

Aussi, ces annonces attirent les utilisateurs et créent de nouvelles fonctions pour les tokens de l’écosystème Ronin. Certains joueurs alors endormis profitent du prix bas des Axies pour en acheter et les brûler afin de multiplier leurs chances d’obtenir le premier prix. Ronin et Katana reprennent alors du service.

En effet, 2 jours après l’annonce du programme de développement, Dappradar décrit que les utilisateurs de portefeuilles Ronin sont plus nombreux de près 20 %, tandis que les utilisateurs de Katana (l’exchange décentralisé de Ronin) ont vu leur nombre d’utilisateurs augmenter de presque 40 %. La stratégie semble fonctionner.

Évolution du nombre d’utilisateurs de Ronin et de Katana – Source : Dappradar

Axie Infinity : un feu d’artifice créatif

Le cri de ralliement du tigre des play-to-earn fonctionne. La communauté répond présente. Forte de sa créativité, elle organise même des événements (concours artistiques pour les fans, création de contenu, par exemple). Cette construction collective stimule l’utilisateur. En effet, sa participation par le travail et l’investissement crée un lien différent avec le jeu.

« Ensemble, nous construisons l’univers Axie. Que vous soyez un créateur de contenu, un développeur de communauté, un chef de guilde, un collectionneur d’Axie, un combattant d’arène ou un éleveur, chacun d’entre vous est un missionnaire important dans sa quête pour créer un nouveau type de jeu. C’est l’un des nombreux nouveaux programmes que nous introduirons en 2022 pour encourager la construction collective de l’univers Axie. »

The Lunacian

La bombe est peut-être amorcée. Axie Infinity sort aujourd’hui une nouvelle saison de jeu « player versus player » (PVP) après avoir motivé et boosté ses troupes. Le compte à rebours commence pour la sortie du nouveau token RON, début du mois de février. Il sera peut-être le bouquet final de ces festivités Axiennes. La communauté espère cependant que les marchés revêches ne mettront pas fin à la fête.

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L’article Axie Infinity (AXS) : le nombre d’utilisateurs explose ! est apparu en premier sur Journal du Coin.

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5 Cryptos à Fort Potentiel pour 2022 !

Alors que 2021 a été marquée par plusieurs tendances comme l’explosion du secteur des NFT, l’envolée du Bitcoin ou des mèmes coins comme le Dogecoin, le marché pourrait consacrer d’autres projets crypto en 2022. Sans plus attendre, voici notre avis sur 5 cryptomonnaies à fort potentiel.   Top 5 Crypto pour 2022 Après une recherche approfondie sur les crypto-monnaies les plus prometteuses et à fort potentiel, nous avons dressé une liste des top 5 crypto-monnaies en 2022.   1 – Lucky Block (LBLOCK) La plateforme LuckyBlock a pour ambition de révolutionner l’univers des jeux de loteries. En proposant une solution […]

L’article 5 Cryptos à Fort Potentiel pour 2022 ! est apparu en premier sur Cryptonaute.

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YouTube : Arrivée des fonctionnalités You et d’un support « remix » pour YouTube Shorts

Il est clair que le rapport de DappRadar mentionnant les ventes de NFT atteignant 25 milliards de dollars, rien qu’en 2021, ne laisse personne indifférent. Des géants du web comme Twitter et Meta se sont, à tour de rôle, manifestés en vue de surfer sur cette vague. Pas plus tard qu’hier, YouTube affichait une volonté d’accueillir […]

L’article YouTube : Arrivée des fonctionnalités You et d’un support « remix » pour YouTube Shorts est apparu en premier sur Cointribune.

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Ethereum 2.0 est mort, longue vie à Ethereum !

Mutation ou révolution ? Depuis son lancement en 2015, le réseau Ethereum a connu de nombreuses évolutions. Désormais, celui-ci se prépare à l’une des mises à jour les plus importantes de son histoire : Ethereum 2.0. Cependant, les développeurs souhaitent dorénavant faire évoluer cette terminologie, pourtant historiquement utilisée par l’ensemble de l’écosystème. 

Ethereum 2.0 : la mise à jour tant attendue

Le réseau Ethereum est depuis de maintes années le berceau d’une innovation florissante. Nous y avons vu ainsi éclore divers phénomènes tels que les ICO, la DeFi, les NFT et plus récemment le Metavers

Néanmoins, les performances du réseau n’arrivent pas à suivre la demande grandissante. Ainsi, depuis plusieurs mois Ethereum est victime d’une importante congestion. Une des principales conséquences de cette congestion a été l’augmentation drastique des frais sur le réseau. 

Heureusement, les développeurs ont imaginé plusieurs évolutions visant à améliorer les performances du réseau et lui permettre de traiter un volume plus important de transactions, sans impacter négativement l’expérience utilisateur. 

Ces évolutions ont longtemps été regroupées sous le nom d’Ethereum 2.0. Ainsi, Ethereum 2.0 désigne diverses mises à jour : 

Le changement de consensus, avec le passage du proof of work au proof of stake ; Le déploiement de sharding, une solution visant à scinder le réseau en plusieurs sous-réseaux, afin d’augmenter la capacité de traitement.

>> Préparez le prochain bull run d’Ethereum en vous inscrivant dès maintenant sur la plateforme FTX  (lien affilié) <<

“Ethereum 2.0”… c’est fini

Dans une publication parue le 24 janvier sur le blog officiel de la Fondation Ethereum, celle-ci annonce la fin d’Ethereum 2.0. Rassurez-vous, on parle seulement de la terminologie et non des diverses évolutions que comporte cette mise à jour. 

En effet, dans les anciennes versions de la roadmap, Ethereum tel que nous le connaissons devait laisser place à une nouvelle version du réseau, d’où l’appellation d’Ethereum 2.0. 

“Dans le cadre de cette feuille de route, la chaîne en proof of work existante (Eth1) serait finalement dépréciée via la bombe de difficulté. Les utilisateurs et les applications migreraient vers une nouvelle chaîne Ethereum de type proof-of-stake, connue sous le nom de Eth2.”

Toutefois, des évolutions de la roadmap sont venu bouleverser le déroulement de cette transition. 

Ainsi, avec l’apparition de The Merge, qui vise à connecter une part de chacune de ces deux versions d’Ethereum, il ne fait plus sens de les différencier. 

En effet, The Merge vise à connecter la partie “applicative” d’Ethereum tel qu’on le connait, à savoir l’ensemble de l’écosystème d’applications, à la partie consensus d’Ethereum 2.0 en proof of stake. Pour rappel, cette couche de consensus a été déployée en décembre 2020, via le lancement de la beacon chain.

Couche d’exécution et de consensus

C’est pourquoi les développeurs ont décidé d’abandonner l’appellation d’Ethereum 2.0. À la place ces derniers proposent les appellations suivantes : 

Ethereum 1.0 devient : couche d’exécution ;Ethereum 2.0 devient : couche de consensus ;

Par conséquent, Ethereum sera désormais l’addition de ces deux entités. Couche d’exécution + couche de consensus = Ethereum

Fuuuuuuuuuuusion.

En pratique, cela ne change pas grand-chose. Cependant, cela permet d’apporter plus de clarté et de ne pas perdre les nouveaux arrivants, qui découvrent Ethereum, Ethereum 2.0 et peuvent avoir du mal à comprendre le lien entre les deux. 

“Un problème majeur avec l’appellation Eth2 est qu’elle crée un modèle de pensée erroné pour les nouveaux utilisateurs d’Ethereum. Ils pensent intuitivement qu’Eth1 vient en premier et qu’Eth2 vient après. Ou qu’Eth1 cesse d’exister une fois qu’Eth2 existe. Ni l’un ni l’autre n’est vrai. En supprimant la terminologie Eth2, nous évitons à tous les futurs utilisateurs de naviguer dans ce modèle mental déroutant.”

Cette décision a été prise du fait de l’arrivée imminente de ladite fusion de la couche d’exécution et de la couche de consensus via The Merge. Ainsi, le raccordement des deux entités a été annoncé pour les alentours du 22 juin 2022

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L’article Ethereum 2.0 est mort, longue vie à Ethereum ! est apparu en premier sur Journal du Coin.

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