SIXR at first glance is a concept of "Cricket + Web3," but only after a deeper understanding of Ahad's founding of Bongo can one truly grasp the core logic of this project.



The real dilemma of Bangladesh's entertainment industry is not that audiences lack genuine interest, but that the entire ecosystem has long been in a gray area: rampant piracy, content being casually reposted, fragmented dissemination becoming the norm, and creators, platforms, and consumers all not receiving fair treatment. This is the situation that SIXR aims to break—using Web3's transparency and incentive mechanisms to make the value flow of entertainment content traceable and monetizable, so that every participant can receive the rewards they deserve.

From Bongo's exploration to SIXR's upgrade, it reflects another important case of Web3 reconstructing traditional industries.
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GasWaster69vip
· 2h ago
The piracy problem is rampant; can Web3 really solve it? It still feels a bit idealistic. In fact, the core issue is that creators don't get paid, and it's not really on the chain... That period in Bongo's history is indeed interesting, but how far SIXR can go remains a question. The incentive mechanism sounds appealing, but I'm worried it might just be another way to cut leeks. This logic is indeed solid, but can the Bangladesh market support it? Web3 restructuring the industry sounds good in theory, but how many can actually be implemented?
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RektDetectivevip
· 2h ago
The rampant piracy issue is indeed terrible; it directly causes creators to lose their earnings. If Web3 can truly straighten out this problem, that would be a real win. But to be honest, the incentive mechanism always sounds great in theory, while actually implementing it is another matter, brother.
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GasFeePhobiavip
· 2h ago
I really didn't expect piracy to be so rampant. I thought it was just because the audience didn't have money, but it turns out the core issue lies in the ecosystem itself.
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TokenomicsShamanvip
· 2h ago
Damn, finally someone has clarified the situation in Bangladesh. I have deep experience with rampant piracy; I followed several content series before, but because the dissemination was too fragmented, I couldn't keep up. I'm optimistic about the SIXR approach, but it depends on how it's implemented later. If the incentive mechanism isn't designed carefully, it’s all for nothing. The history of Bongo is indeed foundational. Without understanding this background, just hearing "cricket + Web3" sounds a bit awkward. Wait, can creators really monetize smoothly? Or will it just become another middleman profit scheme...
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CoffeeNFTradervip
· 2h ago
Bro, I’m convinced by this logic. Finally, someone has explained the mess in Bangladesh thoroughly. Piracy is indeed a pain point, and the transparent mechanism of Web3 can really solve it. Bongo paving the way to SIXR feels a bit like testing the waters first and then going for the big move. If this can truly make all participants earn money, the creator ecosystem might really start to change. But the key still depends on whether the user base can grow. As long as people don’t come, everything is just empty talk.
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