You've heard of RWA. What about DeWA?
by now, hopefully you've heard of Pokemon cards.
Pokemon is a 30 year old asset class. Courtyard, Collector Crypt, and RWA platforms did not create the market. The innovation was instant buyback.
The consumer behavior is simple: people don't just want to own collectibles, they want to know they can sell.
RWA platforms today are like early centralized exchanges. Bitfinex did not invent BTC demand. It made BTC easier to trade
Courtyard does this for assets with existing demand, like Pokemon cards.
but crypto was always meant to create new markets
Uniswap birthed DeFi summer by allowing anyone to deploy liquidity pools for long tail tokens like memecoins.
The same logic can apply to the long tail of collectibles:
Decentralized World Assets (DeWA)
non-fungible assets with built-in exits from day one
why hasn't it happened already?
New assets are volatile. Understandably, you wouldn't buy back a collectible that might have no demand the next day.
so why not just let buyers provide liquidity, the same way a launchpad does?
because collectors want upside and instant exits, not LP risk
we pioneered this concept last year:
$7M+ in volume
$250k+ paid to creators
all while still in beta
It proved the demand but made the issue clear: variance.
The reason Courtyard and RWA platforms can provide huge jackpots is scale. To be the house, you need huge capital upfront to underwrite extreme pulls
Think a $100k card from a $1k pack.
You can be mathematically profitable and still have a high chance of going bankrupt.
In summary:
- Creators want to launch without upfront capital
- Collectors want upside and instant exits
- Nobody wants to be the bank
that's where vibechain comes in: the underwriter for infinite world assets.
Call it DeWA.
Imagine creating a new collection with zero upfront capital. Your collectibles have bounded floor bids from day one. Your collectors have instant buybacks.
think Hyperliquid: a trader with little capital can leverage shared liquidity from day one
on vibechain, a collectible with no existing market has built-in exits from day one
The protocol is the underwriter. The liquidity is the moat. Randomness is the edge.
Solvency is enforced by math and backed by shared liquidity. See the technical claim
DeWA summer is closer than you think