The NFT marketplace war heats up — here's how OpenSea and Blur stand head-to-head.
The fight for the top spot among NFT marketplaces is heating up. It's OpenSea vs Blur season, and the gloves have come off:
- How the two platforms compare
- What the data shows
- What the outlook for the NFT space is
Comparing OpenSea vs Blur
Blur's first move after its launch in October was to go after OpenSea in price. It reduced trading fees to zero and cut royalty fees. OpenSea responded by enforcing a block of all collections listed on non-royalty fee-paying platforms. This stemmed the outflow of value from OpenSea to Blur, but only for a while.
Blur eventually found a way to bypass OpenSea's block and set the stage for the great airdrop:
The airdrop, then, was a smashing success. Not only did it generate loads of attention in the space, but it also turned Blur into one of the top protocols on Ethereum:
In a particularly audacious move, Blur turned the tables on OS, daring creators to block listing on OpenSea to receive full royalty fees:
The marketplace wars are well and truly on now:
But is Blur a fundamentally better platform than OpenSea?
Casual users probably won't see a big difference between the two. But traders and heavy users benefit from a better UX, specifically geared toward them:
The situation for OpenSea looks particularly concerning when you compare the latest data of the two platforms…
OpenSea vs Blur: The Data
This could be due to the second season of the Blur airdrop being underway. By trading on Blur, users can rack up points now. This, of course, translates into more elevated volumes. Still, the numbers are impressive, especially because it doesn't stop at trading volume.
Even though a share of trades is wash trading, it looks like Blur is heavily eating into OpenSea's market share:
Except for unique user count, Blur has now overtaken OpenSea on all metrics.
How sustainable is this?
As Nansen notes, the top 100 traders on Blur make up a significant share of its trading volume:
And analysts caution that the top traders are farming BLUR just like they were farming other marketplace tokens before that:
Still, no marketplace has ever eaten as much into OpenSea's dominance as Blur has managed. OpenSea's dominance in the weekly trader count, the only metric it still leads in, is down to a historic low:
OpenSea vs Blur: The Outlook
OpenSea launches a token
The NFT space has been long barreling down OpenSea's door to launch a token. With the leader exposed, it may have no choice but to give in.
Although there is arguably a share of traders farming Blur's next airdrop, the longer Blur sits at the top spot as the NFT marketplace, the stronger its brand becomes. A token could be a relatively manageable, if not inexpensive way to fight fire with fire. The trend has been the same every time: whale traders follow the financial incentives. That could be OpenSea's ultimate trump card.
NFTs become more financialized
OS token or not, the NFT space is merging with DeFi for good. Blur has forced other marketplaces to compete for the biggest wallets with incentives first and UX second. Both are geared toward traders, not towards creators. Mass enforcement of royalty fees looks dead in the water and the new market leader will be a DeFi platform first, and a creator platform second.
Vertical marketplaces will rise
This opens a niche for smaller marketplaces targeting specific niches. As mentioned in our last report, strong brands will have the means and incentives to launch their own marketplaces. Creators may band together and target collectors over traders to ensure they are paid for their work. Entirely new monetization mechanisms could arise from this too. In a race to the bottom for royalty fees, NFT creators will have to find creative ways around trader dominance.
One thing is for sure. The NFT marketplace wars are far from over. Are you not entertained?