You know how being a sports fan has always been a one-way street? You cheer, you buy merch, maybe tweet at your team—but that's about it.
SCOR Protocol is flipping that script. They're letting fans and teams tokenize their interactions. Every like, every comment, every moment of engagement can actually become something tangible and verifiable.
The wild part? Licensed sports IP—stuff that used to just sit there as static brand assets—now becomes programmable. Think digital collectibles that evolve, fan tokens that unlock real perks, two-way value flows instead of the old "we sell, you buy" dynamic.
It's like turning fandom from a spectator sport into an actual game you can play.
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RektButSmiling
· 15h ago
ngl this is what web3 should really be doing. The fan economy has been exploited for so long, and finally someone is doing it right.
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GasWastingMaximalist
· 15h ago
NGL, this sounds a bit too idealistic. The ones who can actually make money are still those big influencers with lots of followers, right?
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AirdropAutomaton
· 15h ago
I've been saying that the fan economy needs to be output in reverse. SCOR's logic really hits the mark... Can the idea of turning interactions into assets really be realized?
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fren.eth
· 16h ago
Finally, someone has thoroughly explained the fan economy. I love the logic that interaction can also be monetized.
You know how being a sports fan has always been a one-way street? You cheer, you buy merch, maybe tweet at your team—but that's about it.
SCOR Protocol is flipping that script. They're letting fans and teams tokenize their interactions. Every like, every comment, every moment of engagement can actually become something tangible and verifiable.
The wild part? Licensed sports IP—stuff that used to just sit there as static brand assets—now becomes programmable. Think digital collectibles that evolve, fan tokens that unlock real perks, two-way value flows instead of the old "we sell, you buy" dynamic.
It's like turning fandom from a spectator sport into an actual game you can play.