Silicon Valley Gaming Tycoon Trey Smith Launches FREE NFT Collection “Mankind by the Assembly”

Collection SOLD OUT in less than two minutes

NEW YORK, NY / ACCESSWIRE / October 10, 2022 / In today’s bear market, unfortunately, NFTs are not flying off the shelves. However, leave it to Trey Smith, the Silicon Valley gaming mogul and founder/CEO of MECH.comthe first code-free game engine with an epic Web3 battlefield game that encourages and is designed for a true creator economy.

Avazona, Friday 14  October 2022, Press release image

Avazona, Friday 14 October 2022, Press release image

Just like Smith’s project MECH.com is notorious for selling out every drop under 30 minutes of each release (MECH has sold out eight MECH NFT collections and three MECH land sales so far), the same record holds for his personal NFT collection that he dropped at OpenSea on September 27 2022 entitled “The humanity of the assembly.”

Humanity” is an NFT collection of 31 unique AI artworks personally designed by Smith. A generative art algorithm is a tool that allows both engineers and artists to use an automotive process in art creation, typically used to develop and create large NFT collections. The components of a generated art algorithm is originally designed through layers in popular creative suites, before the code is written into a smart contract. Smith’s NFTs show what he imagines would be the last images one would see before human extinction. He designed his artwork on Midjourney. Midjourney is an independent research laboratory that explores new media of imaginal artworks. “It’s the favorite creator’s tool for that art style,” declares Smith.

In true Smith fashion, on September 27, “Humanity” was sold out in less than two minutes. In the first 30 minutes, the total traded volume was 1.8 ETH. Within 45 minutes, the fundraising volume increased to 9 ETH. On September 28, the total traded volume was 9.8 ETH and as of on October 6, the total traded volume was 11ETH.

Avazona, Friday 14  October 2022, Press release image

Avazona, Friday 14 October 2022, Press release image

Part of Smith’s mission with each of his brands has consistently been to empower his community, which he has succeeded in doing MECH.com and now with The humanity of the assembly. Smith leads by example by showing different ways a creator can take advantage of creator tools, such as those in MECH, to generate their own Web3 resources to make money. Smith’s latest personal collection, along with MECH, exemplifies a central movement in Web3 that has seen Smith pioneer a true maker economy, assigning power to the community and their creators.

About Trey Smith:

MECH.com was created by Trey Smith, the founder of Kayabit Games. Kayabit Games amassed over 100,000,000 downloads of their games. Trey and his team have extensive experience in creating popular and, more importantly, playable games: Eight of the games invented by the Kayabit team broke the Top 10 in the App Store. Ten of the Kayabit games created by Trey and his team were published by Ketchapp and Ubisoft.

Trey is also the co-founder of the largest no-code game development software, Buildbox. Buildbox has more than 1,000,000 users and has been used to create thousands of games, which in turn have had billions of downloads. After exiting Buildbox, Trey decided to forge a new path, creating the largest and most in-depth multiplayer 3D NFT game on the market, Mech.com. Learn more about Mech here and follow them further Twitter or Disagreement to keep you updated on announcements.

On humanity at the assembly:

Humanity is a set of 31 images created with AI by Trey Smith. Each image is a different depiction of the last thing humanity would see before extinction. Each NFT grants full legendary access to the upcoming member project, The Assembly. The gathering includes live events, a discussion portal, NFT business training and mastermind sessions hosted by Trey. You can buy an NFT at Open sea.

Contact information:

Blockchain Media Inc.
Danielle Payton
305.992.1590
BlockchnMedia.io

SOURCE: The humanity of the assembly

See the source version at accesswire.com:

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