Top 5 Food NFTs That Changed The We Look At NFTs

Top 5 Food NFTs That Changed The We Look At NFTs

NFT
January 9, 2023 by Diana Ambolis
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You already know and adore NFTs, but did you know that you can now eat them? Actually not at all. The food NFTs could not be eaten in any way. Unless you transfer one to a hardware wallet, in which case you automatically receive the remaining ones. Consider supporting one of the many NFT projects
Top 5 Food NFTs That Changed The We Look At NFTs

You already know and adore NFTs, but did you know that you can now eat them? Actually not at all. The food NFTs could not be eaten in any way. Unless you transfer one to a hardware wallet, in which case you automatically receive the remaining ones. Consider supporting one of the many NFT projects that provide holders with a new kind of utility: food, rather than trying to induce indigestion (or a trip to the ER).

That’s correct; after spreading from the blockchain over the past few years and influencing practically every aspect of popular culture, NFTs have now made it to the food business. And although the majority of producers have been working hard to use the blockchain as a host for video games, television shows, movies, music, and almost any other sort of intellectual property (IP), some are stepping outside the box and disrupting a new market sector of non-fungible nosh. Here are the top 5 food NFTs in the market right now.

Food Fighters Universe

Owners of Bored Ape NFT have continuously come up with original and inventive ways to make money off of their owned IP. However, the Food Fighters Universe may be one of the more intriguing (and delectable) ways a member of the BAYC community has accomplished this. Food Fighters, a multifaceted NFT initiative, made its initial mark on the market with Bored & Hungry, a fast food outlet in Long Beach, California, that uses four BAYC NFTs as components of its branding.

Since the debut of Bored & Hungry, Food Fighters has expanded into a number of BAYC-inspired culinary projects. Dr. Bombay’s Sweet Exploration, a dessert shop cooperation with Snoop Dogg, and Bored Taco, a collaborative venture with Web3 architect and crypto-fund founder Champ Medici, are two of the project’s more famous BAYC-focused culinary products.

Also, read –Β How Are These Teen Nft Artist Are Making Millions?

Rare Pizzas

Find a more well-known pairing than pizza and the blockchain. In an effort to host the biggest pizza party ever, Rare Pizzas, a whimsical twist on the legendary Bitcoin Pizza Day of May 23, 2010, first made headlines in 2021. To deliver fresh pies to crypto and NFT aficionados worldwide, the Rare Pizza team spent over $300,000 at more than 300 pizzerias in over 60 countries.

Collectors can support the project’s goals by simply purchasing a Rare Pizza Box to become involved. Even better, unopened boxes can be exchanged for a 1/1 piece of rendered art with a random combination of toppings from the 314 artists who contributed to the Rare Pizza website collection.

NFT Wine & Spirits

Perhaps it’s already well-known that NFT people enjoy getting drunk. You’ll nearly always run upon some Web3-themed cocktail at large celebrations held outside of conferences like NFT.NYC and Art Basel Miami. But the NFT sphere has also seen the emergence of wine and spirits outside of IRL meetups.

Wine has quickly made its way into the blockchain thanks to initiatives like WokenWine, a business that wants to make it possible for wineries to use NFTs to track their wines and help put an end to counterfeiting tactics. The industry’s exposure to the non-fungible market has increased even outside of Web3-native projects, as a growing number of independent wineries now provide their own NFTs for authentication.

NFT fans, however, need only look to BlockBar, a blockchain-based spirits platform where users can purchase scotch, tequila, and other alcoholic beverages as NFTs that can be exchanged for the actual bottle. BlockBar, the first DTC NFT marketplace for fine wine and spirits, strives to increase the security, convenience, and accessibility of collecting fine spirits.

Ape Beverages

Ape Beverages provides an alternative for people who prefer other beverages to wine and spirits or who cannot yet legally consume alcohol. With its debut product, Ape Water, obtained from Mt. Shasta in California, Ape Beverages, the first sustainable water beverage to emerge from Web3, seeks to hydrate the NFT market.

Ape Beverages uses a Bored Ape as the face of its branding in food NFTs, which is similar to the endeavors of the Food Fighters universe and has served as a magnet for support among BAYC holders. The company has already made a big impression at significant conferences with its events and general presence. It even has a charitable goal of helping areas that lack access to resources for clean water.

Flyfish Club

Some NFT eateries, in contrast to Bored & Hungry, aren’t meant for everyone. There are a limited few NFT gastronomic experiences that are only fully accessible to individuals in a certain tax band, similar to the premium aspect of BlockBar. Undoubtedly, one such experience is the NFT-gated eatery Flyfish Club, which is still under construction.

Entrepreneur and well-known NFT creator/collector Gary Vaynerchuk declared at the start of 2022 that he and his hospitality firm, VCR Group, would open the first NFT Restaurant. The New York City location of the members-only private dining club Flyfish Club is scheduled to open in 2023. Membership is acquired as an NFT.

Flyfish Club will undoubtedly be inaccessible to some people, but the concept of token-gated, exclusive activities is not new in the NFT market. Given that many brands, projects, and even live events have used token-gating to reward their dedicated followers, it wouldn’t be unreasonable to expect that additional NFT culinary endeavors may eventually follow suit. Even though there are currently only eateries and social clubs involved, the relationship between NFT and food will undoubtedly continue to heat up over time.