QuantumCats NFT Collection
A Collection of Bitcoin Dressed Cats
When QuantumCats, a collection of Bitcoin Audience NFTs, began minting, servers crashed and sales were halted due to an overwhelming number of butlers trying to adopt the 3,000+ cats. The adoption price is a whopping 0.1 Bitcoin.
Where do these cats come from?
They come from the TaprootsWizard family, a prestigious clan that raised $7.5 million in seed funding at the height of Audience's popularity and noise around the end of 2023, and is known for their crudely drawn B-grade artwork, and especially for their lack of community engagement and importance. They are the family that unites, or rather revives, the dying NFT world.
This cat features NFT!
The Quantum Cats Collection is a Bitcoin Audience NFT project that can be categorized as a collectible. Following in the footsteps of Taproot, the artwork isn't highly hyped - it's known for its approach to exceeding block limits by applying Evolving Inscriptions technology, which costs around $70,000 - but what really makes it highly hyped is that the artist's initial collection has already sold at Sotheby's auction.
Isn't Taproot Wizard one of those projects?
There is a peculiar tendency of evolutionary smart investors. The habit of investing without looking at the real thing becomes natural, especially when the habit of investing in web3, 2 without looking, and investing in shelved 'carousels' has been burrowed deep into the fingers of ants, and the reputation of Taproot Wizard as a collection developer has certainly been of great value to QuantumCats as a 'breed cat'. These are OGs who are leading communities and trends that are important to the blockchain, especially the bitcoin ecosystem. I don't think it's a product or a service.
Quantum Cats for 0.1 BTC, too expensive.
You know the answer to that, right? Spot ETFs make it easier for the public to invest and create an ecosystem for bitcoin like never before, but it's a bitcoin derivative through Layer 2, Audience, and it's backed by a hip, prestigious developer. That's how I'd define it.
Fingers crossed?