It was only a matter of time before the two hypebeast markets collided. In April, Nike released its first collection of virtual sneakers, called Cryptokicks, which comprised 20,000 NFTs, including one designed by artist Takashi Murakami that was bought by someone named AliSajwani for $134,000.
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View Details »«The mechanics around NFTs and sneakers are pretty similar,» said Jurgen Alker, who runs the NFT studio for Highsnobiety, the lifestyle site that covers streetwear and sneakers. «Both are created around scarcity and drops. It is about community, status and belonging to something.» This is Nike's first entry into the market and its first release with RTFKT (pronounced «artifact»), a company it bought last December that had stoked a market for virtual sneakers. Other sneaker giants also have gotten involved. Last December, Adidas released an NFT collection called Into the Metaverse that gave buyers access to limited-edition streetwear including hoodies and tracksuits (but no sneakers). Made in partnership with the Bored Ape Yacht Club, Punks Comic and crypto evangelist GMoney, it was essentially a digital drop for NFT-savvy Adidas collectors and netted more than $22 million in the first afternoon, according to The Verge. Asics, the Japanese athletic brand, recently created 1,000 NFT sneakers in collaboration with STEPN, a fitness app that rewards runners with cryptocurrency for each step they take (think of it as a combination of Pokemon GO and Strava). The virtual sneaker can be worn in the app, and features «gamification» features including sneaker leveling, shoe-minting
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