CryptoKitties Creator Debuts NBA Game on Its Own Blockchain
Blockchain meets basketball in the newest game from Dapper Labs, the developers of CryptoKitties.

Blockchain meets basketball in the newest game from the developers of CryptoKitties.
Dapper Labs’ NBA Top Shot has launched into private beta following the game’s initial product announcement in July 2019. The game is looking to fill a product niche by combining manager-style sports games with digitally scarce goods called non-fungible tokens (NFTs).
“Fans can own a piece of the action and they can participate in this economy of basketball, which has never really happened before,” Dapper Labs VP of Partnerships Caty Tedman said in a phone interview.
NBA Top Shot is also the first Dapper Labs game built on top of the team’s new custom blockchain, Flow.
Read more: NBA and ‘CryptoKitties’ Creator Team Up to Launch In-Game Collectables
Tedman said the new chain gives the game higher throughput and consistency, a valuable product given Dapper Labs product history.
In 2017, Crypto Kitties infamously clogged the Ethereum blockchain by executing more transactions than the chain could handle at that time. The team announced a new blockchain with faster transaction speeds in March.
“We want to make sure, first of all, that the environment is totally stable since we've had the experience of CryptoKitties crashing – not by our volition,” said Tedman.
Tedman said Top Shot is looking to tip off in the coming months and at least by the beginning of the NBA’s next season in October (which may itself be postponed).
Gameplay
In essence, Top Shot combines digital trading-card games with apps like Tap Baseball.
“The main premise of the mobile game is a manager-style game where you’re kind of creating the strongest team you can,” Tedman said.
Users can build rosters – Tedman herself prefers a lineup of European hoopers known for smooth passing and shooting – based on interests or viral moments like a slam dunk.
Dapper’s NFTs also capture “moments” such as a LeBron James poster dunk or a Steph Curry step-back three-pointer from real in-game events. These moments are then wrapped using the ERC-721 token standard, creating a digital basketball card only you can own.
NFTs can then be traded on Dapper’s secondary market and are available for purchase in crypto or with credit cards, Tedman said.
To begin with, the mobile game is free while NFTs are an add-on, a similar method debuted by crypto game MLB Champions this spring.
Read more: ‘MLB Champions’ Downplays ETH, Aims for Mass Market in New Game Reboot
Not only that, but Dapper reached an agreement with the NBA and the National Basketball Players Association (NBPA) to use the likenesses of basketball’s greatest stars from the league’s 50-plus-year history: think Magic Johnson on the blockchain.
“We’re lucky that we tied the product to a moment in time rather than the live game because we can continue going backward [in time],” Tedman said.
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