Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
It would be fascinating if people suddenly started doing interesting things with NFTs from like 2019 presumed abandoned to junk status. A kind of unrugging. “Hey remember that thing you minted, decided was a scam and forgot about? It can now be used to play this weird game.”
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@promptrotator.eth
Onchain NFT metadata makes this a lot more feasible, i.e. Audioglyphs uses data from another NFT project to seed the generative music. https://opensea.io/collection/audioglyphs
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Steve
@stevedv.eth
This was one of the first projects I bought into because of this very idea. Now that I’m wiser, I see in the contract that tokenURI points to a heroku server for the metadata, and the Pixelglyph images are stored on ipfs.
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@promptrotator.eth
Can’t say I’m surprised. L2’s in theory should make onchain metadata more accessible cost-wise.
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Steve
@stevedv.eth
Metadata is relatively inexpensive to store for generative collections since they’re arrays of text selectively served by the smart contract. Loot is a great visual example. L2s are more helpful with writing data (lots of it and/or lots of times) and storing more complex media (in kilobytes, not yet megabytes)
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