Otherside combines a social hub, land-linked NFTs, playable characters, resource systems, creator tools, and a marketplace layer into one world economy. For any of it to hold long-term value, those pieces need to feel useful inside actual gameplay, not just on secondary markets.
Otherside Land, Regions, and Resources
Otherdeeds represent land plots in Otherside. Each deed can carry traits such as environment type, sediment, resources, artifacts, or Koda-related attributes. The world includes named regions: Biogenic Swamp, Chemical Goo, Rainbow Atmos, Cosmic Dream, and Infinite Expanse.
Resources are intended to feed creation and utility loops inside the world. A plot's scarcity alone doesn't make it useful. Land becomes meaningful only if resources, crafting mechanics, access privileges, or in-world experiences give ownership a function inside the game itself.
Otherside Avatars, Kodas, and Playable NFTs
Avatars turn wallet ownership into in-world presence. BAYC, MAYC, Kodas, Kodamaras, and other supported assets can shape how a user appears, plays, or participates. Kodas matter most here because they're native to Otherside's lore rather than imported from an earlier collection.
Each asset type serves a different role, and the table below maps them to their intended function:
| Element | What It Does In Otherside |
|---|
| Otherdeed | Represents a land-linked NFT asset with traits that can connect to world mechanics. |
| Koda | Acts as a native character and lore asset tied to rare land and future utility. |
| Voyager | Names a participant in the Otherside journey and community experience. |
| Resources | Feed future crafting, manufacturing, trading, or gameplay loops. |
| ODK | Gives creators tools for building interoperable objects and experiences. |
| Agora | Points toward a marketplace layer for buying, selling, and trading world assets. |
None of these assets should be treated as carrying finished utility on day one. Their value depends on whether they become integrated into repeatable activities, creator-driven economies, and social spaces that users return to by choice.
Otherside Creator Tools and Manufacturing
Creator tools are what make Otherside comparable to platforms like Roblox, Fortnite Creative, or Minecraft-style worlds, where users generate much of the content. The Otherside Development Kit (ODK) is designed to help builders create objects and experiences that work across the platform.
Manufacturing turns templates and resources into world objects. The process includes optimization, moderation, resourcing, and imbuing, meaning the creator economy is supposed to have technical checks and safety rules rather than unlimited uploads. Whether enough creators will build quality spaces, and whether users will return to those spaces after novelty fades, remains one of the project's unanswered questions.