Bitcoin’s newfound NFT hype attracts interest from BSV developer Twetch
Join the most important conversation in crypto and web3! Secure your place today
The recent fervor surrounding Ordinal’s NFTs on Bitcoin is already attracting developers interested in building an ecosystem for the meme-themed art — now including Twetch, the team behind a “pay-to-earn” social network built on the rival Bitcoin SV blockchain (BSV) ).
Twetch’s existing social network on BSV allows users to monetize their content. The platform also includes a non-fungible token (NFT) marketplace, a BSV wallet and several other features such as a chat function and a job board.
“When we saw the Ordinals stuff coming out, we were just excited to jump on the ‘NFTs on BTC’ train,” Twetch founder Billy Rose told CoinDesk in an interview. “We’ve been doing data on the blockchain for about five years now, so we’re just ready to go.”
Bitcoin blockchains have been chock full of quirky JPEGs, audio files and text for the past two weeks, thanks to last month’s successful (albeit controversial) launch of the Ordinals protocol, which stores NFTs on the Bitcoin blockchain.
The trend has received mixed reviews from longtime Bitcoin supporters, many of whom have long derided the NFT craze on Ethereum and other blockchains as a distraction from Bitcoin founder Satoshi Nakamoto’s vision of a decentralized network primarily for financial transactions.
Twetch’s sudden interest may provide another reason for consternation among Bitcoiners, given BSV’s self-marketing as the original Bitcoin and its association with Craig Wright – the Australian computer scientist who has claimed, without definitive proof, to be Satoshi Nakamoto, the inventor of Bitcoin.
Even Ordinals creator Casey Rodarmor has reservations about Twetch’s association with BSV due to the links to Wright and his questionable evidence. But he welcomed the interest.
“I hope they see the light and start building on Bitcoin,” Rodarmor told CoinDesk. “And if they make a great wallet, that’s all for the best.”
Read more: Bitcoin community erupts in existential debate over NFT project ordinals
Ordinals: Hype or hope?
The Ethereum community has already laid out a successful “blueprint” for a vibrant NFT ecosystem: a browser-based wallet like MetaMask, a marquee brand like Bored Apes, and an NFT marketplace like OpenSea.
Twetch’s founders aim to replicate Ethereum’s success by borrowing that blueprint to build a similar NFT model on Bitcoin, especially now that Ordinals have become the dominant blockchain’s shiny new object.
“Ethereum laid the road map for us – OpenSea, Bored Ape and MetaMask,” Rose explained. “These are the ultimate tools to use NFTs, work with NFTs, store them, have real ownership of them and the ability to transfer and trade.”
It is not clear whether the Ordinals craze is just another flash in the pan or a more permanent development.
Twetch’s co-founders are betting on the latter. In fact, Twetch is already exploring raising capital to build its NFT ecosystem on Bitcoin.
“We’re just looking for people who want to help … whether it’s an investor or customer partnership,” Twetch CEO and co-founder Josh Petty told CoinDesk in an interview. “If anyone can join in having fun on Bitcoin, we’d love to talk to them.”
The Case of Satoshi Dice
This wouldn’t be the first time a startup has capitalized on a fun viral trend in the Bitcoin community. Over a decade ago, in April 2012, Erik Voorhees (who later founded the cryptocurrency exchange, ShapeShift) launched a clever little gambling game called Satoshi Dice.
Players would send bitcoin to a Satoshi Dice address based on the odds and payout they sought (lower odds yielded a higher payout and vice versa). If a player won, a bitcoin payment was immediately sent back to their wallet address.
The game quickly became a huge hit in the Bitcoin community, and in early May 2012, Satoshi Dice generated more bitcoin transactions than all other use cases combined.
“Incredibly, in the period from Bitcoin’s inception until early 2014, more than half of all Bitcoin transactions went to or from Satoshi Dice,” Voorhees told CoinDesk. “This also means that the game paid more than half of all mining fees on the network during those years. It was absolutely a killer app.”
In an environment where Bitcoin’s grant – the amount of bitcoin awarded to a miner for successfully mining a new transaction block – is gradually shrinking, high transaction fees will become increasingly attractive to miners.
If Ordinals and Twetch were to generate something similar to the success Satoshi Dice had between 2012 and 2014, mining fees could increase – and network security would theoretically improve. Hard-line Bitcoiners may have to hold their noses.
“I’m best friends with the Riot Blockchain guys and they’re doing really well because they’re so big, but everybody smaller is having a hard time right now,” Petty said. (Riot Blockchain is one of the largest public Bitcoin mining companies in the world.) So when they see the fees go up, what I predict is that there will be more miners who start to become pro-Ordinals, because they are [currently] don’t make a lot of money.”