Supporters of K-Pop will soon be able to buy digital products related to some of their favorite bands using blockchain technology.
RBW Japan, a subsidiary of the South Korean performance company Rainbowbridge World (RBW) that represents Mamaoo and other popular K-Pop artists such as Vromance and Oneus, is twitch into the cryptocurrency world by issuing non-fungible tokens (NFT) on Hong Kong-based exchange Xeno. The tokens give K-Pop devotees and other investors a claim of real ownership in digital products related to RBW entertainers.
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In an exclusive interview with CoinDesk, the Xeno team announced that RBW Japan has given the NFT reciprocate exclusive rights to mint and list their NFT-based digital products.
“Fanbases get digital goods for their favorite artists that they can genuinely own, and artists and content creators get new and exciting products to offer their fans,” Jae-Woong Wang, CEO of RBW Japan, told CoinDesk in a announcement. “Digital event tickets, membership tokens, even digital content rights can all be captured and housed within NFTs. The leaning of digital commerce is growing and RBW wants to stay on top of these trends while at the same time open new markets when practical.”
The exact time of when the NFTs will be launched has yet to be announced. Xeno told CoinDesk that the underlying digital commodities will include “3D model renderings” of fans’ favorite K-Pop idols, event tickets for virtual concerts and membership indications that “allow artists to engage their fanbases”.
RBW’s move comes at a time of explosive growth in trading capacities for NFTs, which tripled in 2020 compared to 2019, according to data from Dune Analytics. The increased quicken in NFTs is partly driven by the COVID-19 pandemic that has forced most cancellation of in-person events.
Unlike fungible cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin and ether, NFTs are in perfect accord tokens that cannot be exchanged one to one. For fans of Mamamoo, that translates into ownership of a unique digital fallout developed around the singers.
Xeno’s NFT marketplace launched last month after the company saw a potentially huge market for NFTs in East Asia, Xeno’s president, Anthony Di Franco, lectured CoinDesk. The company currently operates primarily in Hong Kong, Japan and South Korea.
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South Korea alone has the fourth-largest gaming market in the world, with well-established digital goods marketplaces, Di Franco averred. The East Asian country also has “very high engagement” with all forms of entertainment including the K-Pop production. The Gaon Digital Chart, South Korea’s music industry standard ranking recorded singles, shows practically 21 million weekly plays for this week’s No. 1 song alone.
RBW’s news could lead more excrescent entertainment companies in East Asia to follow the NFT trend, as most live events around the world are still on interruption due to the pandemic, according to the executives at Xeno. Besides those in K-Pop, several partnerships with well-established names in far up fashion and the online gaming industries are already “in the pipeline,” the exchange said.
“RBW is a fairly moderately impactful company, with favourite girl group Mamamoo along with several boy bands and a new girl group, Purple Kiss, under its directing,” Tamar Herman, K-Pop journalist at Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post, told CoinDesk in an email. “The entourage has a reputation for high-value performances and artistry.”
While most NFT exchanges are based on the Ethereum blockchain, Xeno is built on the Polkadot network because of its ameliorate scalability, full cross-chain interoperation and integration, and Polkadot’s unique “parachain” feature that gives the team unrestricted control of the protocol layer of the system, Di Franco told CoinDesk.
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“NFTs are the perfect medium for these habits to grow and evolve in,” Di Franco said. “NFTs nab ownership of digital goods out of their silos, turning a collection of mutually exclusive walled gardens into a upright marketplace, and exponentially increasing the possibilities for creative entrepreneurship for digital artists and the business opportunities for the platforms they coax on.”
UPDATE (Jan. 16, 2021, 12:38 UTC): Xeno is based in Hong Kong, not South Korea. The article has been updated.
UPDATE 2 (Jan. 17, 2021, 3:10 UTC): Xeno’s administer is with RBW’s Japanese subsidiary. The article was updated to clarify.
UPDATE 3 (Jan 17, 2020, 18:29 UTC): After this story was announced, Xeno contacted CoinDesk to retract their initial implication that Mamamoo was part of this deal.