Digitized | Featured #44
Welcome to this week's edition of Featured, your weekly guide to the most interesting blockchain-based digital objects – across gaming, social, music, media, fashion, AI, immersive environments, and other consumer crypto categories.
This week, we turn the spotlight on Clusters, your one identity across all blockchains.
In the multichain world, using and owning a host of different identities across different blockchains can get confusing and leads to fragmentation. Clusters solves this problem.
→ One universal name for the multichain experience.
Powered by LayerZero, Clusters is the first crosschain naming service. Unlike ENS, SNS, and other naming services, Clusters embraces the multichain world. Currently, there are 51,818 names and counting.
A Cluster name is suffixed with a trailing slash: /. All your wallets are then suffixed individually under this universal name, just like a website URL. For example, you can have
/eth
/sol
/ordinals
/defi
/nfts
And so on.
In addition, Clusters introduces demand-based capped recurring pricing, mitigating malicious squatting prevalent in other naming services. The goal is to create an efficient namespace market. You can learn more about how this works in this link.
If you enjoyed this edition of Featured, please subscribe below and follow @digitizedweekly on Twitter.
Collab+Currency may be an investor in the projects and/or products that appear in Featured.
Information regarding any company or investment in Featured should not be construed as an endorsement or recommendation of that company or investment for any purpose whatsoever, either for purposes of investment or otherwise. Any person receiving Featured or accessing our website is encouraged to consult with their own financial advisor, tax advisor and/or attorney before making any decision to invest.
The above material and content is educational in nature and should not be considered to be a recommendation to invest. Investing in digital assets, NFTs or cryptocurrency is highly speculative and volatile. Past performance is not indicative of future results.