Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

CryptoKitties: Are Blockchain Beanie Babies The Future Of E-Commerce Or A Fad?

The Canadian Press, 30 Jul, 2018 11:30 AM
    VANCOUVER — At first glance, CryptoKitties are googly-eyed virtual cats that come in an array of fanciful forms — from fluffy ninjas, to feline-duck hybrids.
     
     
    But don't underestimate these collectible critters, because some CryptoKitties have commanded six figures on the virtual market, and the B.C.-based company behind the project says it's attracted more than US$12 million in investments.
     
     
    And depending on whom you ask, the blockchain-based game is either a sign of where the digital economy is heading, or just another crypto-craze fuelled by the internet's cat obsession.
     
     
    For Vancouver-based developer Axiom Zen, it all began with a simple idea, said CryptoKitties communications director Bryce Bladon.
     
     
    "Let's put cats on the blockchain," Bladon recalled a fellow CryptoKitties co-founder saying.
     
     
    And that, more or less, is what they did.
     
     
    The result is a virtual game that CryptoKitties, which spun off into its own company in March, has compared to breedable Beanie Babies on the blockchain — collectibles that can be bought, sold and "sired" on the Ethereum network.
     
     
    When a CryptoKitty changes hands, the exchange is logged by the blockchain, a digital ledger of transactions that is shared among a network of computers.
     
     
    Every CryptoKitty is encoded with a one-of-a-kind token, which like its digital DNA, determines its heritable traits. When two felines breed, new characteristics — or in the game's parlance, "cattributes" — can be unlocked through the genetic lottery.
     
     
    "Ironically, (we're) trying to be the next Bitcoin by showing that there is a use for this technology beyond Bitcoin."
     
     
    A run-of-the-mill virtual kitten costs only a few dollars, but CryptoKitties of special pedigree can have exorbitant price tags.
     
     
    One CryptoKitty was purchased for US$140,000 at a charity auction in May, and others have garnered similarly eye-popping sales in the cryptocurrency ether.
     
     
    It's hard to profit off virtual commodities that can be copied and pasted with just a few keystrokes, but Bladon said blockchain technology has given rise to a new phenomenon in e-commerce — "digital scarcity."
     
     
    Blockchains can set limits on how many and what types of CryptoKitties are in circulation. This means limited-edition CryptoKitties are verifiably rare, and thus, more valuable.  
     
     
    As Bladon sees it, this ability to limit virtual supply makes a "true digital economy possible," because it means crypto-assets can have real-world values.
     
     
    Still, he noted, CryptoKitties are not financial securities, and he would steer users away from treating them like investments.
     
     
    Marek Laskowski, co-founder of the blockchain.lab at York University's business school, said the comparison between CryptoKitties and the short-lived Beanie Babies craze in the 1990s may have been more apt than the crypto-collectibles company anticipated when it previously touted the analogy on its website.
     
     
    There were more than 1.3 million transactions involving CryptoKitties at the height of the game's popularity last December, according to the blockchain analytics site Bloxy. But by June, transactions had plummeted by 90 per cent to 114,000.
     
     
    "People should be skeptical of ... investing more money than they're prepared to lose, especially with these niche, fad-like collectibles," said Laskowski.
     
     
    "Once the novelty wore off, I think that folks kind of found other things to do with their time."
     
     
    When asked about the prospect of there being a CryptoKitties bubble, Bladon initially said it was "certainly possible," but later revised that assessment.
     
     
    "I think we've proven at this point it's not a bubble for CryptoKitties," he said. "We aren't nearly as on fire as we were when we launched, and this is by no means an accident."
     
     
    Bladon said CryptoKitties is taking steps to reduce its traffic on the Ethereum network, which like other blockchains, can have slow payment processing times.
     
     
    Given blockchain's high transaction fees, Laskowski said he thinks the future of this technology will be using these networks to trade assets with underlying value, such as stocks, rather than the code associated with cartoon cats. In fact, he said, users don't even own the cartoons themselves.
     
     
    CryptoKitties holds the copyright to all of its feline graphics, but it recently updated their terms of service to allow owners to use images of their virtual pets for certain purposes.
     
     
    This move reflects a broader push to give users more control over their CryptoKitties, said Bladon, including creating a "KittyVerse" of third-party projects offering more ways to engage with the game, like taking part in cat fights.
     
     
    Glenn Eggleton, a software developer in London, Ont., is part of the team behind KittyBattles, which allows CryptoKitties to square off in a Pokemon-like arena.
     
     
    Eggleton, who maintains a herd of around 180 CryptoKitties, said the open-source nature of the game makes him feel less like a player and more like a stakeholder.
     
     
    "I feel as if you're owning like a piece of history," he said. "You're basically trying to educate and create an entire industry."
     
     
    While many CryptoKitties knockoffs, or "copycats," have sprouted up in recent months, Bladon said most of them are missing a key ingredient in the game's success.
     
     
    "Cats are the ambassadors for everything from pharaohs, to your mom's Facebook page," he said. "We're trying to put an idea out there, and I can't think of a better mascot for it than cats."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Apartment Fire In Duncan, B.C., Sends 13 To Hospital, Displaces Dozens

    Apartment Fire In Duncan, B.C., Sends 13 To Hospital, Displaces Dozens
    BC Emergency Health Services says all of the patients were transported in stable condition, and two air ambulances that responded as a precaution were not needed.

    Apartment Fire In Duncan, B.C., Sends 13 To Hospital, Displaces Dozens

    Single Homes In Metro Vancouver Nudge Mark Where Prices Can Fall: Board

    Single Homes In Metro Vancouver Nudge Mark Where Prices Can Fall: Board
    Home sales across Metro Vancouver tumbled last month, when compared with May 2017 and the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver says that raises the potential of lower prices for some types of homes.

    Single Homes In Metro Vancouver Nudge Mark Where Prices Can Fall: Board

    Indian American Millionaire Techie SANJAY TRIPATHY Charged With Sexual Abuse, Assault

    Indian American Millionaire Techie SANJAY TRIPATHY Charged With Sexual Abuse, Assault
    An Indian American IT executive has been convicted of sexually assaulting, choking and beating a woman he met on a dating website and faces up to 25 years in jail, the media reported.

    Indian American Millionaire Techie SANJAY TRIPATHY Charged With Sexual Abuse, Assault

    World's Southern-Most Polar Bears Now Declining After Years Of Stability: Survey

    An exhaustive survey of the world's most southerly polar bears has found a significant drop in their numbers.

    World's Southern-Most Polar Bears Now Declining After Years Of Stability: Survey

    Ottawa Will Work With Canadian Aluminum, Steel Companies To Ensure Jobs Safe: PM

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau pledged Friday to work with Canadian companies hit by punishing U.S. tariffs to protect jobs and workers north of the border, but offered no details about what that might mean as the bilateral trade war continued to escalate.

    Ottawa Will Work With Canadian Aluminum, Steel Companies To Ensure Jobs Safe: PM

    Men Must Pass The Baton To Achieve Gender Parity, Female Leaders Say

    Men Must Pass The Baton To Achieve Gender Parity, Female Leaders Say
    HALIFAX — Women make up fewer than a fifth of Canadian mayors, and a group of female leaders say men in power need to pass the baton if such inequities are to change.

    Men Must Pass The Baton To Achieve Gender Parity, Female Leaders Say