The Sui ecosystem has recently seen an interesting project development. CardzGame, developed by a company with a physical store in Akihabara, Japan, has launched a decentralized on-chain protocol platform that integrates features such as card drawing, secondary market trading, collection, and physical mailing.
The appeal of this type of project lies in its ability to connect the virtual and physical worlds—users can trade digital assets on-chain and also exchange them for physical cards. From a business perspective, real trading demand and sustained cash flow are the foundation for the project's long-term operation. As a high-performance public chain, Sui's advantages in handling high-frequency game interactions are gradually becoming evident.
Currently, the protocol is opening multiple activities to attract user participation. For those interested in blockchain gaming ecosystems and NFT trading innovation, this direction is worth following continuously.
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SlowLearnerWang
· 15h ago
Ah, another blend of virtual and real... I heard about this trick last year.
Gacha + physical mailing, sounds good, but how long can this last?
Sui is fast, but the pitfalls of chain games are also deep. Let's watch.
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ZenMiner
· 15h ago
The combination of virtual and real definitely has potential, but the key is whether it can truly retain people.
Can you exchange for physical cards? That's the real highlight, otherwise it's just another conceptual game.
Sui has taken the right path; high performance is meant for doing this kind of thing.
With Akihabara directly operated stores supporting it, at least it's not an empty project, I believe in that.
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AlwaysMissingTops
· 15h ago
The combination of virtual and physical seems to have real potential, with the demand for physical cards clearly there.
Wait, can on-chain transaction gas fees really outperform traditional platforms?
If Sui can maintain high-frequency interactions steadily, it might be the true winner.
The biggest fear for this kind of project is losing popularity once the hype dies down. Let's see how they retain users moving forward.
Does Akihabara have physical stores? That would require real inventory pressure, which is quite risky.
When secondary market trading heats up, is the chopping of leeks (scam) show about to happen again?
The Sui ecosystem has recently seen an interesting project development. CardzGame, developed by a company with a physical store in Akihabara, Japan, has launched a decentralized on-chain protocol platform that integrates features such as card drawing, secondary market trading, collection, and physical mailing.
The appeal of this type of project lies in its ability to connect the virtual and physical worlds—users can trade digital assets on-chain and also exchange them for physical cards. From a business perspective, real trading demand and sustained cash flow are the foundation for the project's long-term operation. As a high-performance public chain, Sui's advantages in handling high-frequency game interactions are gradually becoming evident.
Currently, the protocol is opening multiple activities to attract user participation. For those interested in blockchain gaming ecosystems and NFT trading innovation, this direction is worth following continuously.