Came back to read this post by @Ukj1111 properly and I now kind of understand what @OriginalBlokyz is building.
They believe they can build a successful IP in Web3, and honestly, a few things stood out to me.
The biggest takeaway wasn't about collectibles, partnerships, or even the IP itself.
It was their understanding of the real problem.
When people talk about building a Web3 IP, the conversation usually revolves around art, branding, lore, or community.
But none of that matters if nobody sees it.
The team pointed out something that's easy to overlook: many Web3 projects try to grow by targeting Web2 audiences, but that bridge is still difficult to cross. A lot of people outside crypto still associate NFTs and Web3 with speculation rather than value.
Instead of forcing that transition, Blokyz is taking a different route.
They're choosing to grow where the audience already exists.
By partnering with established Web3 brands and communities, they're putting their products directly in front of people who already understand digital ownership and internet-native culture.
That strategy makes a lot of sense to me.
Another thing I found interesting is how central physical collectibles are to their vision.
Most projects focus entirely on digital assets.
Blokyz believes that owning something physical creates a different kind of connection.
A collectible sitting on your desk isn't just another asset in a wallet. It's a constant reminder of a community, a brand, or a moment that matters to you.
That emotional connection is something many digital-only projects struggle to create.
What strengthens this approach even further is the distribution network they're already building.
ππππππ«π§ ππππ«π’ππ―ππ₯ is an upcoming fully onchain generative art collection by Adam Ilenich (@adamilenich), blending vintage computing aesthetics with concepts drawn from early neural network research.
At its core, the project explores how machines remember.
Using the 94 printable ASCII characters as its foundation, each artwork begins as a recognizable symbol before being disrupted by layers of digital noise. The system then attempts to recover the original form, not through direct replication, but by reconstructing it from learned patterns and relationships.
The result is a mesmerizing series of animated pieces where characters:
Fragment into interference
Flicker through distortion
Drift through chaotic static
Gradually reassemble into familiar forms
The collection is organized into 7 distinct categories:
β’ Dense Symbols
β’ Containers
β’ Floating Marks
β’ Crossbars
β’ Ghosts
β’ Angles
β’ Curves
Each category carries its own visual identity, enhanced by CRT-inspired effects, scanlines, phosphor glow, and signal-recovery animations that evoke the feeling of rediscovering lost data from an aging terminal.
Every piece is paired with a unique soundscape.
As the retrieval process unfolds, the audio evolves alongside the visuals, producing ambient electronic tones that reinforce the sensation of memory being reconstructed in real time.
The interactive website lets collectors:
β’ Browse the complete archive
β’ Filter works by visual family
β’ Observe live retrieval sequences
β’ Capture and create CRT-style video loops
ππ’π§π ππ§ππ¨
Supply: 478 NFTs
Allowlist: 0.0069 ETH
Public Mint: 0.01 ETH
Platform: OpenSea
Interested collectors can apply through the official project website for allowlist consideration.
Pattern Retrieval combines generative art, computational memory, and onchain permanence in a way that feels both nostalgic and forward-looking.
Rather than treating ASCII characters as simple symbols, it transforms them into evolving digital memories constantly degrading, adapting, and finding their way back.
Definitely a collection worth exploring before mint, especially through the live specimens that showcase the project in motion.
Any virus known previously to scientists in the lab that later becomes transmissible to man, was deliberately taken from the lab to be transmitted to man.
This is my position
Sometimes you build something just to prove you belong in the room
I put everything into this, the design, the detail, the grind behind it.
I'm hoping @l0f0_00 and @Trappwurld see it for what it is.
This is the link- https://t.co/gKAhkMmK7b
GM guys,
I just saw that @l0f0_00 game by @Trappwurld is already live.
The first thing I did was try the game. Iβm doing bad presently, but I managed to get into the top 50 on the leaderboard.
Pushing from 49 to top 20 is the new goal.