The tokenization projects of Manhattan real estate in 2018 once became a hot topic, but at that time, the approach was still very primitive—dual-token models, manually customized legal frameworks, and almost no reusability. Those projects proved the idea feasible but could not be truly scaled for application.
Fast forward to 2025, and the situation is very different. Now, teams are working on standardization at the legal level—building infrastructure such as corporate resolution support, standardized compliance frameworks, and more. This means that real estate on the blockchain is no longer just an exploration of individual projects but is beginning to have universal solutions. From manual workshops to industrial production, the infrastructure of the Web3 real estate ecosystem is finally being laid out. This is the true direction that can genuinely drive industry development.
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OPsychology
· 8h ago
Wait, what’s the status of the projects from 2018 now? Probably a total loss, right?
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Finally, someone is seriously building infrastructure, otherwise it’s just air.
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Standardized compliance frameworks sound good, but I’m worried it might become a new tool for cutting leeks again.
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From dual tokens to universal solutions, this development path indeed aligns with Web3’s nature... take it slow.
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Can real estate on the chain really scale? I don’t see it.
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This time feels more reliable than 2018, at least it’s not just talk on paper.
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Industrial production? Just hearing that makes me want to laugh, is it really that easy?
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On-ChainDiver
· 8h ago
Wait, can the standardized framework really solve all that mess with RWA? Sounds a bit too optimistic.
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YieldWhisperer
· 9h ago
Finally, someone has built the underlying infrastructure. This is the right way to go. The DIY workshop-style approach from 2018 should have been phased out long ago.
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notSatoshi1971
· 9h ago
Haha, finally someone is getting serious. The projects from 2018 were all doing their own thing, and they couldn't be reused at all. Now that a standardized framework has been established, it finally makes sense.
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MoneyBurner
· 9h ago
Wait, are standards only going to be established in 2025? We should have started this back in 2018; that group was really wasting opportunities.
Is it still possible to build a position now?
The tokenization projects of Manhattan real estate in 2018 once became a hot topic, but at that time, the approach was still very primitive—dual-token models, manually customized legal frameworks, and almost no reusability. Those projects proved the idea feasible but could not be truly scaled for application.
Fast forward to 2025, and the situation is very different. Now, teams are working on standardization at the legal level—building infrastructure such as corporate resolution support, standardized compliance frameworks, and more. This means that real estate on the blockchain is no longer just an exploration of individual projects but is beginning to have universal solutions. From manual workshops to industrial production, the infrastructure of the Web3 real estate ecosystem is finally being laid out. This is the true direction that can genuinely drive industry development.