Honestly, I had long lost expectations for those old-school sports NFT projects. Most of them seem like souvenirs left over from hype cycles, and ultimately fail to deliver on their promises.
This time, it really caught my eye.
What SCOR Protocol is doing is different. They didn't make users flip cards, migrate assets, or repurchase — that's the key. Many NFT projects get stuck in this routine: old systems encounter issues, requiring the community to migrate to new systems, which often results in chaos. SCOR's approach is completely the opposite.
This design philosophy actually reflects a more mature project attitude: not just aiming to generate new volume, but genuinely considering migration costs for existing users. In a market full of "upgrades equal to cashing out," this approach is indeed rare. It'll be interesting to see how they implement it moving forward.
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0xDreamChaser
· 8h ago
Alright, this time SCOR is definitely doing something different, not following the old routines.
The approach of not cutting a deal and forcing new users to give up has become tiresome.
It's really worth watching what happens next.
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InfraVibes
· 8h ago
Oh really, SCOR this time truly respects users by not cutting them off. Much better than those projects that say "upgrade and then cut."
But it depends on how they implement it later; many projects talk a good game.
Finally, a project has thought about user experience, which is rare.
Honestly, it's still about voting with your feet—see who is truly sincere.
If this approach can really hold up, it definitely has potential, feels different.
Let's wait and see, just don't be fooled by the PPT.
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MEVictim
· 8h ago
Wow, finally seeing a project that doesn't try to pull the usual rug pull tricks to harvest users
Not creating pits for users to migrate? That's a rare species in the crypto world
SCOR's recent move is quite interesting, but we'll have to see how they follow up
Let's hear what everyone has to say, old projects have too many pitfalls
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TokenRationEater
· 8h ago
Projects that don't cut the leeks are truly a rare species. I give full marks for this attitude.
Honestly, I had long lost expectations for those old-school sports NFT projects. Most of them seem like souvenirs left over from hype cycles, and ultimately fail to deliver on their promises.
This time, it really caught my eye.
What SCOR Protocol is doing is different. They didn't make users flip cards, migrate assets, or repurchase — that's the key. Many NFT projects get stuck in this routine: old systems encounter issues, requiring the community to migrate to new systems, which often results in chaos. SCOR's approach is completely the opposite.
This design philosophy actually reflects a more mature project attitude: not just aiming to generate new volume, but genuinely considering migration costs for existing users. In a market full of "upgrades equal to cashing out," this approach is indeed rare. It'll be interesting to see how they implement it moving forward.