@kseniam0s@tickify_io Definitely from organisers / artists. They want to own their data, and understand who the true fans are walking through the doors at their events
Garrett Wilson can't afford Knicks finals tickets.
A father and son who've waited years for this moment can't either.
The cheapest seat is $3,554.
This is what happens when tickets stop belonging to fans.
@tickify_io is fixing this
β‘ what you do: on-chain ticketing and AI fan intelligence for live events.
π― who itβs for: event organisers, artists, athletes, and venues priced out or boxed in by Ticketmaster. Targeting: India, SEA, MENA.
π current traction: 60+ events, $100K+ GMV, 2,000+ users. Ran events for Allen Iverson. $1.1M signed pipeline.
The live events industry in 2026
Governments: we will cap resale prices
Scalpers: cool we will just use more bots
Fans: why are tickets $800?
Artists: we have no idea who came
Venues: same...
@tickify_io : we built the thing that fixes all of this
The biggest problem in ticketing is not just scalping.
It is data loss.
Every ticket resold through a third party marketplace breaks the fan relationship.
The artist does not know who bought.
The team does not know who attended.
The organiser cannot identify true fans.
Tickifyβs on-chain resale keeps the intelligence inside the ecosystem.
@tickify_io