The crypto world is actually quite good at pulling many seemingly distant things into the same market.


Finance was moved on-chain, gaming was moved on-chain, and now even some things that originally only existed in the collector circles are slowly entering this system.
Take watches, for example. When I first saw @watchdotfun, my first reaction wasn't actually DeFi, but culture.
In traditional collector circles, watches like Rolex, AP, and Patek are inherently status symbols and collectible assets. But after entering Web3, they suddenly became an experience you could participate in.
The platform regularly launches watch drops, with on-chain verifiable lottery mechanisms determining winners, and all lottery processes are publicly verifiable. The watches themselves are authenticated by WristCheck.
In the past, the luxury goods market was extremely closed, with extremely high barriers to entry.
But now you'll see a new feeling.
It's not simply about buying watches, but participating in an on-chain cultural game.
It's kind of like mixing collecting, probability, community vibes, and on-chain transparency all together.
When Web3 starts touching these traditional consumer sectors, you realize a shift.
On-chain isn't just trading tokens, it's also slowly rewriting some of the consumption experiences we're familiar with.
@easydotfunX @wallchain #Ad #Affiliate
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