Many people are accustomed to understanding the on-chain world as a pure financial system, but in reality it's slowly becoming a new form of entertainment consumption.



I first noticed @watchdotfun because I was drawn to its approach.

Traditional luxury consumption has always had a barrier to entry. A watch like Rolex comes with a high price tag, long waiting lists, and many people don't even have the opportunity to participate.

But watch's approach is actually quite simple—it breaks down this high-barrier consumption into a probability-based participation model.

Users can gain raffle eligibility by participating in platform raffles or completing tasks. Each round of the prize pool corresponds to a real luxury watch, and the drawing process is completed on-chain with transparent, public results.

Luxury goods used to be typical elite consumption, but now they've become a form of community entertainment.

Some people participate because they love watches, while others simply find the on-chain raffle model interesting.

This experience actually represents a shift—Web3 isn't just bringing financial assets on-chain, it's also gradually changing consumption patterns.

As luxury goods begin entering on-chain culture in this way, the entire process feels more like a new form of internet entertainment.

@easydotfunX @wallchain #Ad #Affiliate
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