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So there's this ongoing debate in the NFT community right now that's actually pretty interesting to watch. Everyone's arguing about which anime NFT project is really leading the charge - Azuki or Final Bosu. Both have serious followings, and honestly, the way this is playing out tells you a lot about where the anime NFT space is heading.
Azuki's been around since 2021. Chiru Labs created this collection of 10,000 anime-themed NFTs on Ethereum, and they built something pretty solid with it. The whole appeal was getting access to The Garden, this community space where holders connect with other creatives and Web3 people. They've got exclusive drops, events, the usual benefits. The characters are clean - anime-inspired with different hairstyles, clothing, accessories. It became kind of iconic at that intersection of art, tech, and anime culture.
But here's where it gets messy. Azuki launched Elementals as a follow-up, and the community wasn't happy about it. People thought the new collection looked too similar to the originals, like a watered-down version. The backlash was real - floor prices tanked by 61% and you saw a massive spike in long-term holders just dumping their NFTs. That kind of stumble is hard to recover from.
Now Final Bosu is doing something different. They started small back in 2021 with just 555 NFTs on Ethereum, but they've been evolving. Recently they launched on Abstract, and the approach feels fresher. Instead of just slapping different traits on characters, they're building actual lore. Each character type in their universe - they call it Keshuna City - has its own function and story. It's character-driven rather than trait-driven, which sounds like a subtle difference but it actually matters.
The anime NFT space seems to be rewarding teams that think about narrative and community engagement over just churning out variations. Final Bosu's recent launch has been getting solid traction among anime enthusiasts specifically because of that creative direction. They're not trying to be Azuki 2.0.
What's interesting is watching how these two projects represent different philosophies. Azuki proved you could build a major brand in anime NFTs, but Elementals showed you can also dilute it pretty quickly. Final Bosu seems to be learning from that - being more intentional about what they release and why. Whether that translates to sustained dominance in the anime NFT market remains to be seen, but the momentum is definitely worth paying attention to right now.