OpenSea, a prominent NFT marketplace, is currently developing a platform upgrade known as OpenSea 2.0. According to CEO Devin Finzer, this upgrade is intended to improve the user experience and better differentiate NFT categories as their use cases continue to evolve. Currently, OpenSea and other platforms display NFTs uniformly, regardless of whether they are game tokens or event tickets.
Finzer stated, “We really want to have a marketplace interface that is more adaptable to any type of use case.”
What upgrades are coming to the OpenSea 2.0 platform?
As part of the upgrade, OpenSea is working to display ticket NFTs on a calendar and sort them by date, providing a more customized experience.
In response to the growing popularity of platforms like Blur and Tensor, which offer professional trading experiences, OpenSea’s upgrade aims to make it easier for users to access the professional trading platform. The improved interface allows users to seamlessly switch between a collection view and a more advanced view. Additionally, OpenSea has improved the detection of fake NFT collections and malicious URLs, addressing security concerns in the industry.
While Finzer did not comment on the end of required royalties for NFT creators, he did not reveal whether OpenSea plans to reintroduce a mandatory royalty program in the future.
In terms of emerging trends, Finzer noted the increasing use of the Solana blockchain for NFTs and the growing popularity of Ordinals, NFT-like assets on the Bitcoin blockchain. Despite these trends, he remains optimistic that Ethereum is the blockchain of choice for NFTs, especially as the improvements in transaction fees and speed are enabled by the layer 2 chains.
Finzer doesn’t see Bitcoin as a major NFT option going forward, even with the recent ETF craze. He noted: “I really think the kinds of applications you can build on Bitcoin will probably be limited to art-type use cases, as opposed to more diverse things.”
Navigating the challenging NFT market
Global sales of non-fungible tokens (NFTs), which represent unique ownership of assets on the blockchain, witnessed a significant decline of 63% to $8.7 billion last year, according to data from CryptoSlam. This decline comes despite a notable increase in volume, which reached $918 million between October and November. In contrast, the cryptocurrency market, Bitcoin, saw a significant increase of almost 160% in 2023.
The decline is a notable contrast to 2021’s crypto bull market, when multi-million dollar NFT sales played a defining role. Popularized by collections like Bored Ape Yacht Club, NFTs were initially celebrated as a fun and accessible way for mainstream consumers to get into crypto, while also serving as a status symbol for those investing significant amounts of money in unique digital assets. However, social media platform X (formerly Twitter) recently dropped support for NFT profile photos.
Devin Finzer, the CEO of NFT marketplace OpenSea, emphasizes a broader perspective on defining success for the NFT industry and his business. He emphasizes the need to move beyond viewing NFTs solely as collectible images and focus on building compelling use cases for these tokens.
New York-based OpenSea was a dominant NFT marketplace during the crypto bull market, reaching a $13 billion valuation after a $300 million funding round in January 2022. However, the onset of the recent crypto winter negatively impacted the startup.
In August, OpenSea faced challenges, including the conviction of its former product head for insider trading and criticism for eliminating mandatory royalties for NFT creators. In response, the company laid off 50% of its workforce in November. According to crypto data tracker DappRadar, newer entrants such as Blur, OKX NFT Marketplace, and Magic Eden have shown higher trading volumes than OpenSea over the past 30 days.
When asked about this changing trend, Finzer emphasized that trading volumes can be misleading as some marketplaces incentivize activity by using their own tokens as rewards. He said: “We tend not to focus too much on short-term market dynamics.”