When Bryce Johnson first discovered Axie Infinity, in spring 2021, he was four years out of college at Virginia Commonwealth University and had just started his fourth job as a software engineer, working deep in the bureaucratic morass of the government-facing IT firms around Washington, D.C. Johnson, known among his childhood friends for being “extremely genuine,” with an infectious smile, was driving home from work one day in his Honda Civic, when he happened to hear a guest on a podcast make the case for investing in the metaverse. Specifically, Axie Infinity, a Pokemon-style digital card game that had been gaining momentum in Southeast Asia and that people believed could unlock broad-based crypto adoption. At the time, almost no one was streaming Axie on platforms like YouTube and Twitch, despite the fact that tens of thousands of people were playing daily. “I was just taken aback by the whole idea and decided to dive in,” Johnson says. On April 27, 2021, he posted his first Axie video on YouTube, titled, “How to Win: Axie Infinity Arena! (Beginner’s Guide),” and almost overnight, Johnson says, he became “the face of Axie.” His timing could not have been better: The game was soaring in popularity. At its peak, last August, it was generating $17.5 million a day. In Johnson, Axie found a rags-to-riches nice guy who fit its family-friendly brand. He is not a mercenary crypto shill. Yet the economics underpinning crypto rely on promoters bringing in new players and new money. Without them, as we’ve seen time and again, projects fall apart. Johnson’s charisma is what has built his brand, enabled him to have a crypto-world startup of his own, get signed to Gary Vaynerchuk’s esports agency, evangelize for NFTs—and to walk away from Axie‘s collapse without any real consequences. To learn how this all happened in just over a year, read the Fast Company Premium Exclusive story: “Meet a crypto creator who’s playing to win.”
Войдите, чтобы добавить комментарий
Другие сообщения в этой группе

Social media users have been having a field day with Waymo’s autonomou

If you’re not on TikTok, you may not have heard of Aaron Parnas. But for many young people across the U.S., he’s a prominent political news source, with over 3.5 million followers on TikTok and ju

Getting a sense of the scale of social media platforms can be tricky. While tech companies often share self-serving metrics—like monthly active users or how likely users are to buy products after


Fun fact: The saying “work smarter, not harder” is coming up on its 100th birthday. Coined

If you’ve followed Apple for any length of time, you’ve no doubt come across the notion that the company doesn’t rush into adopting cutting-

Every now and then, you run into a tool that truly wows you.
It’s rare—especially nowadays, when everyone and their cousin is coming out with overhyped AI-centric codswallop tha