Connect with us

NFTs

Millennial entrepreneur behind £35m supplements startup Heights wishes he could tell his 20-year-old self to ‘ditch the NFTs’

TokenTalk Staff

Published

on

Dan with his wife and daughter.

What would you do if you had a six-figure salary? Maybe you’d never cook another meal again, or indulge in a monthly Thai massage and a Soho House membership to unwind from the stresses that come with being on your A-game.

Here at The Good Life you no longer have to imagine what life at the top is like: get real inspiration on how the most successful live their lives.

Today, Fortune meets London-based serial entrepreneur Dan Murray-Serter.

The 38-year-old left a promising career in account management to found Grabble in 2013 with his longtime friend (and current co-founder), Joel Freeman.

The mobile shopping app took off, and Murray-Serter was on the fast track to success. Like Tinder for shopping, users could swipe to “like” and then shop the latest looks from Reiss, ASOS, Topshop and more. But in 2018, Grabble joined the 45 percent of small businesses that failed within the first five years of launch.

Since becoming founder, Murray-Serter openly admits he’s endured three more failed ventures and three major mental health struggles, but the experience inspired him to start a wellness newsletter, which opened his eyes to the largely unregulated world of supplements and led to his latest venture, Heights.

£35,000,000

Recent Heights Review

The dreaded five-year mark is approaching for the “supported by sciencesupplement brand. However, with a reported 30,000 monthly subscriptions, £10 million in annual recurring revenue and a recent valuation of £35 million, it seems Murray-Serter and Freeman have finally found a winner.

A clip from Dan’s business podcast, Secret Leaders:

Now, he’s uncovering what worked for other founders — and, more importantly, what didn’t — on his top-rated business podcast, Secret Leaders.

The finances

Fortune: What was the best investment you ever bought?

Probably my house. It cost £1.2 million and we spent over a year (and about £500,000 renovating it) but it was recently valued at over £2 million. We rent it out for filming and all sorts of things, so it was a very good investment.

Worse?

How long have you been talking about NFTs?

Dan with his wife and daughter.

Dan with his wife and daughter.

What are your childcare arrangements like?

We have a daughter who is turning 3, and my wife and I are exceptionally committed to being equal parents and taking on as much of everything as humanly possible. She goes to daycare five days a week—we split pick-ups and drop-offs equally, and I do all the bathtime and bedtime (probably 98% of all of them over the three years) because it’s been a really important, healthy, and valuable way to get away from my work. I love doing it.

How do you commute to work?

Heights is a hybrid. Monday and Tuesday are at our office in Oxford Circus, so I catch the tube and walk (about 15 minutes) from Regents Park to help me get my 10k steps in. I’m obsessed with steps and walking in general.

On Wednesdays and Thursdays I either stay home or go to a local cafe to work.

On Fridays, I head to Shoreditch to work with a bunch of other founders. We have a shared office, all together, through my Foundrs community. This also means I have East London covered for meetings.

Where do you buy your work wardrobe?

Arket or Massimo Dutti mainly.

“Invest in S&P 500 index funds now, buy Bitcoin and loot NFTs. But the best investment you will ever make is in yourself…”

Where is your favorite watch from?

I use the Samsung S6 Watch. I’ve been really getting into a Peter Attia longevity protocol this year and one of the things I do is Zone 2 training twice a week. After doing some research, I found that this is the best watch for that, so I bought it. I’ve always been pretty anti-smartwatch, but I really like it.

What personal finance advice would you give your 20-year-old self?

Invest in S&P 500 index funds now, buy Bitcoin, and cash in on NFTs. But the best investment you’ll ever make is in yourself, so spend money on training, take this seriously, and figure out how to turn yourself into a financial asset.

The necessities

How do you take your daily coffee?

I have a proper Sage Barista machine at home and I don’t skimp on coffee. It’s a luxury I take seriously – I drink about 4 cups of coffee a day, nearly 30 a week and spend about £30 a fortnight on beans. I’m a fan of Pact Coffee. When I’m out, in an ideal world, I’d spend £4-£5 on Monmouth Coffee. I’d rather have no coffee than a regular coffee. That and warm beer are my big red flags, it’s not worth it, I’d rather be tired or sober.

A Sage The Oracle coffee machine, taken on May 12, 2017. (Photo by Joseph Branston/T3 Magazine/Future via Getty Images)A Sage The Oracle coffee machine, taken on May 12, 2017. (Photo by Joseph Branston/T3 Magazine/Future via Getty Images)

A Sage The Oracle coffee machine, taken on May 12, 2017. (Photo by Joseph Branston/T3 Magazine/Future via Getty Images)

How about eating on the street?

When my daughter was born I realised I couldn’t cook and I didn’t want it to be just mum’s job so I bought a bunch of meal delivery boxes. My favourite was Gousto. Great food, super healthy. I really like it and it seems like a bargain. We spend about £60 a week on this and probably £60 a week or more from M&S, Sainsbury’s or our local Tesco on other fruit and veg.

People eat lunch at a window seat at a branch of the Farmer J restaurant chain on February 5, 2024 in London, United Kingdom. (Photo by Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images)People eat lunch at a window seat at a branch of the Farmer J restaurant chain on February 5, 2024 in London, United Kingdom. (Photo by Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images)

People eat lunch at a window seat at a branch of the Farmer J restaurant chain on February 5, 2024 in London, United Kingdom. (Photo by Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images)

When I’m in town, my go-to places for a quick and easy lunch are Farmer J or LEON. I go to Soho House a lot, but I don’t really know why — it’s never that good, the service is terrible, the prices are high, and the food is average — and yet I still go back — there must be something wrong with me!

“I’m simplifying my life instead of buying more gadgets and stuff.”

How often per week do you eat out or cook at home?

Dining out — what’s that? Realistically, since having our daughter, we’ve tried to have a date night (although much less), and we tend to go to the theater or movies more often than we go to dinner.

I’d say we cook at home six times a week and eat out once if we’re lucky. Our favourite is The William Pub in Kensal Rise.

The treats

Are you the proud owner of Meta smart glasses or any other futuristic gadget?

I have a lot of useless crap that could be considered futuristic, but not the glasses. For now, though, I’m simplifying my life instead of buying more gadgets and stuff.

How do you relax from your most important work?

Since January, I’ve been working out five times a week, including two one-hour Zone 2 workouts on my Peloton and weight training three times a week.

But to be honest, my main way of relaxing is with my two cats Archie and Bells. I can sit and cuddle them for hours listening to an audiobook, watching TV or playing music and the time just flies by. I find it the most relaxing thing in the world.

DALY CITY, CALIFORNIA - MAY 08: A Peloton bike is displayed at a Dick's Sporting Goods store on May 08, 2024 in Daly City, California. Several private equity firms are considering a takeover of struggling fitness company Peloton a week after CEO Barry McCarthy announced he would step down and the company planned to cut 15% of its workforce following a poor earnings report. The company has had 13 consecutive quarters of financial losses. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)DALY CITY, CALIFORNIA - MAY 08: A Peloton bike is displayed at a Dick's Sporting Goods store on May 08, 2024 in Daly City, California. Several private equity firms are considering a takeover of struggling fitness company Peloton a week after CEO Barry McCarthy announced he would step down and the company planned to cut 15% of its workforce following a poor earnings report. The company has had 13 consecutive quarters of financial losses. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

DALY CITY, CALIFORNIA – MAY 08: A Peloton bike is displayed at a Dick’s Sporting Goods store on May 08, 2024 in Daly City, California. Several private equity firms are considering a takeover of struggling fitness company Peloton a week after CEO Barry McCarthy announced he would step down and the company planned to cut 15% of its workforce following a poor earnings report. The company has had 13 consecutive quarters of financial losses. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Every six months, I also book a solo trip to a cabin in the woods for three days, where I sit alone in silence. You lock your phone and there’s no TV or internet. I just write a lot, read a lot, cook a lot, hike a lot, come and feel like I can take on the world.

I’m a pretty extreme person, so my ideas of relaxation include going to Burning Man or Glastonbury every year, being alone in silence, without a phone or internet.

What’s the best bonus you’ve ever bought for yourself?

I’m not really a material things guy. I spend money on experiences and making my life a little easier.

Cape TownCape Town

Cape Town

Probably the most exciting thing I do lately is travel once a year for a month to work remotely in January to avoid the rain. We’ve been to Portugal, California, Bali, and last year, Cape Town. When my daughter was under 2, I upgraded to business class for these flights because it seemed like a better value. Now I have to pay for her too and I don’t want her to be spoiled, so we all have to suffer together in economy (and I only indulge in business class when I fly without them!)

How do you record your notes in a meeting?

I use a Remarkable and I absolutely love it. It’s a little too analog, but that’s its charm and nothing else really works for me. I love the idea of ​​everything being handwritten; it feels more impactful.

Here at The Good Life you no longer have to imagine what life at the top is like: get real inspiration on how the most successful live life. Dive into our other ‘The Good Life’ profiles.

Fortune wants to hear from European leaders about their “Good Life.” Get in touch: orianna.royle@fortune.com.

This story was originally featured in Fortune.com

Fuente

We are the editorial team of TokenTalk, where seriousness meets clarity in cryptocurrency analysis. With a robust team of finance and blockchain technology experts, we are dedicated to meticulously exploring complex crypto markets with detailed assessments and an unbiased approach. Our mission is to democratize access to knowledge of emerging financial technologies, ensuring they are understandable and accessible to all. In every article on TokenTalk, we strive to provide content that not only educates, but also empowers our readers, facilitating their integration into the financial digital age.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Información básica sobre protección de datos Ver más

  • Responsable: Miguel Mamador.
  • Finalidad:  Moderar los comentarios.
  • Legitimación:  Por consentimiento del interesado.
  • Destinatarios y encargados de tratamiento:  No se ceden o comunican datos a terceros para prestar este servicio. El Titular ha contratado los servicios de alojamiento web a Banahosting que actúa como encargado de tratamiento.
  • Derechos: Acceder, rectificar y suprimir los datos.
  • Información Adicional: Puede consultar la información detallada en la Política de Privacidad.

NFTs

RTFKT Announces Project Animus Reveal, Launches Egg Unboxing Event Amid Mixed Reactions | NFT CULTURE | NFT News | Web3 Culture

TokenTalk Staff

Published

on

RTFKT Announces Project Animus Reveal, Launches Egg Unboxing Event Amid Mixed Reactions | NFT CULTURE | NFT News | Web3 Culture

RTFKT, the innovative creator-led company renowned for its cutting-edge sneakers and metaverse collectibles, has officially unveiled its highly anticipated collection, Project Animus. This project marks a significant milestone in RTFKT’s journey, introducing a new dimension to its digital universe after a long period of development. However, the initial market response has been disappointing, with the revealed Animi trading at a floor price of 0.05 ETH, significantly lower than the eggs’ floor price of 0.09 ETH.

The Genesis of the Project Animus

Initially introduced in October 2022, Project Animus introduces a unique ecosystem of digital creatures called Animi. These Animi are designed to enhance Clone X’s avatars, offering an immersive and engaging experience for the community. The recent reveal showcased a diverse range of Animi species, each with distinct design traits and elemental attributes, breaking away from traditional trait-based rarity systems.

A New Digital Frontier: The History and Evolution of Project Animus

The Animus Project is RTFKT’s latest intellectual property, promising to revolutionize the NFT space with its unique digital creatures. The journey kicked off on October 8, 2022, with an interactive teaser event called “The Eggsperience.” This livestream event allowed attendees to explore a virtual Animus Research Facility, generating intrigue and excitement among the community.

Renowned artist Takashi Murakami played a significant role in the project, revealing the first Murakami-themed Animus creature, Saisei, on April 30, 2023. This collaboration added a layer of artistic prestige to the project, further elevating its status within the NFT community.

Animus Egg Incubation: A Journey from Egg to Animi

Clone X NFT holders had the opportunity to claim an Animus Egg until March 1, 2024. This was followed by the Animus Egg Hatching event, which ran from May 7 to June 4, 2024. During this period, holders of several RTFKT NFTs, including Clone X, Space Pod, Loot Pod, Exo Pod, and Lux ​​Pod, were able to use a points-based system to increase their chances of hatching rarer Animi. The limited supply of Project Animus Eggs is capped at 20,000, with no public sale planned.

Mixed market reception

Despite the excitement and innovative features, the market reaction to the reveal of Project Animus has been lukewarm. Animi is currently trading at a floor price of 0.05 ETH, significantly lower than the eggs’ floor price of 0.09 ETH. This discrepancy has led to disappointment among some collectors who had high expectations for the project.

What Awaits Us: The Future of Project Animus

Following the reveal, RTFKT plans to release a collection of exclusive Animus Artist Edition characters. Holders of Clone X Artist Edition NFTs are guaranteed to get one of these special editions. The distribution will include 88 Special Edition Animus, with 8 Mythic (Dragon Sakura), 40 Shiny, and 40 Ghost Animus. The odds of receiving a Special Edition Animus are the same for all Eggs hatched, regardless of the points accumulated.

The remaining Animus characters will be distributed among unhatched Eggs, encompassing Special Edition Animus, as well as Cosmic Animus and Murakami Element from Generation 1, Generation 2, and Generation 3.

Conclusion

RTFKT’s Project Animus represents a bold step forward in the NFT space, combining cutting-edge technology with artistic collaboration to create an immersive and innovative digital ecosystem. However, the initial market reception highlights the challenges of living up to high expectations in the ever-evolving NFT landscape. As the project continues to evolve, it promises to deliver unique experiences and opportunities for its community, solidifying RTFKT’s position as a leader in the metaverse and digital collectibles arena.

Summary: RTFKT has unveiled Project Animus, introducing a unique ecosystem of digital creatures called Animi designed to enhance Clone X avatars. Despite the excitement, market response has been mixed, with Animi trading at a lower floor price than eggs. The project kicked off with an interactive event in October 2022, featuring collaborations with artist Takashi Murakami. Following the reveal, RTFKT will release special edition Animus characters. The total supply of Animus Eggs is limited to 20,000, with no public sale planned.

Fuente

Continue Reading

NFTs

The Olympics have reportedly ditched Mario and Sonic games in favor of mobile and NFTs

TokenTalk Staff

Published

on

The Olympics have reportedly ditched Mario and Sonic games in favor of mobile and NFTs

The long and historic partnership between Nintendo and Sega to create video games for the Olympics reportedly ended in 2020 as event organizers sought opportunities elsewhere.

Lee Cocker, who served as executive producer on several Mario & Sonic Olympics titles, said Eurogamer the International Olympic Committee let the licensing agreement lapse because it “wanted to look at other partners, NFTs and esports.”

“Basically, the IOC wanted to bring [it] “Turn inward and look for other partners so you can get more money,” Cocker added.

The 2024 Summer Olympics kicked off in Paris last week, but there were no Mario & Sonic games available in time for the event to begin – the first time this has happened since the original release in 2007 to coincide with the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics.

Over the past two decades, there have been four Mario and Sonic adaptations for the Summer Olympics, as well as two for the Winter Olympics.

This year, instead of a Nintendo/Sega title, the IOC released Olympics Go! Paris 2024, a free-to-play mobile and PC title developed by nWay, which has worked on several Power Rangers games.

Olympics Go! allows players to compete in 12 sports and unlock NFTs from the Paris 2024 digital pin collection.

The original Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games was announced in March 2007 and marked the first time the two mascots – once archrivals in the console wars of the 1990s – appeared together in a game.



Fuente

Continue Reading

NFTs

DraftKings abruptly shuts down NFT operation, leaving collectors panicking over vast holdings of digital tokens

TokenTalk Staff

Published

on

DraftKings abruptly shuts down NFT operation, leaving collectors panicking over vast holdings of digital tokens

DraftKings, the daily fantasy sports and sports betting company, abruptly shut down a program called Reignmakers on Tuesday, posting a notice on its website and associated app and sending a mass email to some subset of its user base. Reignmakers, which the company launched in 2021, offered pay-to-play competitions in NFL football, PGA Tour golf and UFC mixed martial arts. The decision to eliminate the entire program, DraftKings says, was not made lightly but was forced “due to recent legal developments.”

DraftKings has yet to specify what “recent legal developments” are troubling its now-dead Reignmakers product. The company was sued in U.S. District Court in 2023 by a Reignmakers player named Justin Dufoe, who accuses the company of dealing in unregistered securities, taking advantage of relatively unsophisticated “retail investors,” and failing to market and support Reignmakers to the degree necessary to return to its users the financial benefits expected. DraftKings filed a motion in September to dismiss Dufoe’s complaint, but that motion was denied on July 2. A scheduling conference was held by the parties on July 29; Reignmakers was permanently shut down on July 30. A DraftKings spokesperson reached by Defector on Wednesday declined to confirm whether Dufoe’s complaint is the “recent legal development” that forced the company’s hand.

Users of the Reignmakers NFL product, who in recent days began murmuring on social channels about a notable lack of DraftKings activity so close to the start of the NFL preseason schedule, were caught off guard and, in some cases, devastated by the news. Members of the DraftKings Discord server, where all Reignmakers-related channels were abruptly shut down and locked following the announcement, flooded a general channel in various states of panic, sharing news, theorizing, lamenting, and, in some cases, openly worrying about whether it would be possible to recoup any decent fraction of the genuinely impressive sums of money they had invested in this DraftKings product.

Reignmakers is nominally a daily fantasy contest—users build lineups of players and then pit those lineups against other users’ lineups for cash prizes—but it’s actually a distributor of nonfungible digital tokens (NFTs), originated and sold by DraftKings, and then frequently resold on a dedicated secondary marketplace also hosted by DraftKings. At the lineup-building level, Reignmakers functions like a card-collecting game, with artificial scarcity driving the prices of the most coveted cards to insane, eye-popping heights. Reignmakers NFTs are tiered and offered in timed drops designed to heighten the sense of scarcity. A user can enter a lower-tier contest using a collection of NFTs that may have cost a few hundred dollars in total (or that were earned by purchasing random packs of NFTs that offer generally low odds of scoring top assets) and throw their lot in with hundreds of casual users competing for relatively unimpressive rewards. Random packs at the lowest tier would have prices as low as a few dollars; mid-tier cards—Star and Elite tiers, I’d guess—could cost a player upwards of $1,000.

But players interested in hunting down the biggest payouts, not just from games but from leaderboard prizes and other assorted prizes, would need to enter higher-tier games, and to enter the higher-tier games, a user’s collection needed to include higher-tier NFTs. DraftKings ensured that these cards were extremely scarce and could only be purchased directly on the marketplace at prices that any reasonable person would consider utterly insane.

For example, the highest-tier Reignmaker contests (called the Reignmakers tier, of course) have in the past been limited to listings with at least two of the highest-tier, rarest NFTs (also the Reignmaker tier) plus three NFTs from the second-highest tier (Legendary). NFTs at these tiers are expensive. Not just expensive in the way that, like, a steak dinner is expensive, but expensive in the way that buying even one of them should trigger a mandatory visit to a gambling addiction counselor, if not sirens and a straitjacket. Back in 2022a Reignmaker-level Ja’Marr Chase NFT from something called the Field Pass Promo Set could be purchased directly from the DraftKings Reignmaker Marketplace for a whopping $32,100.

Screenshot via YouTube

Reignmakers users purchased NFTs at various levels with the expectation that owning them would convey better odds of winning contests hosted on DraftKings. This was the gamification element of Reignmakers, which emerged several months after DraftKings began trading and minting its NFTs. But as with all NFTs, a very large part of the real appeal for its buyers was the expectation, however insane, that these worthless, virtually worthless, infinitely duplicable digital images would increase in value over time. Now that both the Reignmakers game and the Reignmakers marketplace have been shut down, Reignmakers NFT holders are worried that their investments may have suddenly lost all monetary value. One Discord user described Tuesday as “a bad day to wake up and realize you have $2,000 worth of unopened NFL Rookie Packs”; Another user asked the group if they should expect “a refund” on the $10,000 they’ve already spent on Reignmakers NFTs this year. A pessimistic Reddit user posted tuesday that they would sue DraftKings if they were forced to take a total loss on a Reignmakers NFT collection worth approximately $100,000.

The game (scam?) was built to make numbers like these not only possible, but somewhat easily achievable. A user who intended to compete from a position of strength in multiple overlapping high-profile contests at the same time, and who had been in the blockchain madhouse for a period of years, could easily have spent six figures on Reignmakers NFTs. DraftKings used non-gaming incentives to entice players to spend more and more money, much like casinos give away free suites to players who over-bet on blackjack. Another Reddit user lamented the loss of the additional prizes and ranking bonuses he had hoped to earn in the upcoming NFL season by having a portfolio of NFTs that had reached the highest levels of value and prestige. “I was already loaded up on 2024 creation tokens and rookie debut cards,” said this Reignmakers userwho claimed his portfolio was finally “close to the top 250 overall.”

Dufoe’s complaint says the NFTs minted by DraftKings for Reignmakers qualify as securities, function like securities, and should be regulated as securities. In its motion to dismiss, DraftKings attempted to position its NFTs as game pieces — eye-wateringly expensive, yes, but essentially the same thing as Magic: The Gathering cards or Monopoly hotels. The court, in resolving these arguments, applied what’s known as “the Howey test,” referencing a case from 1946 in which the U.S. Supreme Court established a standard for determining whether a specific instrument qualifies as an investment contract. Judge Dennis J. Casper, in ruling against DraftKings’ motion, concluded that Dufoe could plausibly argue that Reignmakers’ NFT transactions represent “the pooling of assets from multiple investors in such a manner that all share in the profits and risks of the enterprise,” arguing that DraftKings’ absolute control over the game and marketplace effectively binds the financial interests of the company and the buyers, the latter of whom depend on the viability of both for their NFTs to retain any value.

Reignmakers users are different from Monopoly players in at least one crucial way: A person who buys a Monopoly board has no expectation from Hasbro that those little red and green pieces will appreciate in value. It’s a game! No matter what any hysterically conflicted party may say to the contrary, that’s not what NFT collecting is. DraftKings had been selling Reignmakers NFTs for months before they were gamified, and Dufoe, in his complaint, cites public comments made by DraftKings spokespeople that seem to explicitly position Reignmakers NFTs as assets with independent monetary value beyond their utility in Reignmakers contests. Judge Casper, in his ruling on the motion to dismiss, cites a Twitter account associated with a podcast run by DraftKings CEO Matthew Kalish, who in a tweet described NFTs as “the opportunity to invest in startups, artists, operations, and entrepreneurs all at once.” This is probably the kind of thing that NFT peddlers should stop saying. This advice assumes, of course, that NFTs will continue to exist as instruments on the other side of this and other lawsuits.

DraftKings has posted a worryingly sparse FAQ at the bottom of the your ad Tuesday, anticipating but largely failing to address questions from players who see this as yet another in a long line of brutal blockchain rug pulls. In a hilarious reversal of existing Reignmakers policy, Reignmakers users are now allowed by DraftKings to withdraw their Reignmakers NFTs from their DraftKings portfolios and into their personal NFT wallets, where those NFTs will have precisely zero value, to anyone, for the rest of all time. There’s also vague language about Reignmakers users having the option to “relinquish” their NFTs back to DraftKings in exchange for “cash payments,” subject to “certain conditions” and according to an as-yet-unspecified formula that will take into account, among other things, the “size and quality” of a player’s collection.

Reignmakers users are not optimistic. Those who claim to have been victims of other blockchain market crashes are warning their peers on Discord and Reddit to expect payouts that amount to pennies on the dollar; in the absence of any clarifying information, users are unsure whether cashing out their NFTs from Reignmakers to their personal NFT wallets, for reasons that completely pass any and all understanding, would effectively preclude the possibility of delivering these silly digital tokens back to DraftKings. It remains to be seen what exactly DraftKings has in mind with the “certain conditions” attached to the delivery process. There is much that has yet to be resolved. A DraftKings spokesperson contacted by Defector indicated that more time would be needed to answer a list of specific questions and issued a statement noting that it is “in DraftKings’ DNA to innovate and disrupt to provide the best possible gaming experiences for our customers.” The original complaint is embedded below.

Do you know anything about the demise of Reignmakers, either from the consumer side or from the DraftKings side? We’d love to hear from you. Get it in touch!

Recommended

Fuente

Continue Reading

NFTs

There Will Be No More ‘Mario & Sonic’ Olympics Because of NFTs

TokenTalk Staff

Published

on

There Will Be No More 'Mario & Sonic' Olympics Because of NFTs

Nintendo and SEGA have been teaming up with the Olympics for several years now in the popular Mario & sonic in the Olympic Games series, but a new report claims the International Olympic Committee has abandoned the series in favor of new deals in eSports and NFTs.

According to Eurogamer“A veteran behind the series,” Lee Cocker, told the outlet that the IOC chose not to renew its license with SEGA and Nintendo, letting it expire in 2020. “They wanted to look at other partners and NFTs and eSports,” Cocker told Eurogamer. “Basically, the IOC wanted to bring [it] turn inward and look for other partners so they could get more money.”

Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games is a series that has been running since 2008, with six main games covering the regular and Winter Olympics. In the games, players could control various characters from the Mario and Sonic franchises and compete in Olympic sporting events.

It’s no secret that NFTs are a big part of this year’s Paris 2024 Olympics. Olympics Go! Paris 2024 is a mobile and mobile-connected game your site states that players can “join the excitement of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games with nWay’s officially licensed, commemorative NFT Digital Pins collection honoring Paris 2024!”

As for eSports, Saudi Arabia will host the ESports Olympic Games in 2025. This is part of a partnership with the Saudi National Olympic Committee (NOC) that is expected to last for the next 12 years and is expected to feature regular events.

IOC President Thomas Bach said: “By partnering with the Saudi NOC, we also ensure that Olympic values ​​are respected, in particular with regard to the game titles on the programme, the promotion of gender equality and the engagement with young audiences who are embracing esports.”

In other news, Someone claimed they’re suing Bandai Namco because Elden Ring is too difficult.



Fuente

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2024 TOKENTALK.TOP. All rights reserved. This website provides educational content and highlights that investing involves risks. It is essential to conduct thorough research before investing and to be prepared to assume potential losses. Be sure to fully understand the risks involved before making investment decisions. Important: We do not provide financial or investment advice. All content is presented for educational purposes only.