In the fast-evolving world of Web3 gaming, where digital assets change hands in seconds and player decisions hinge on split-second timing, even minor delays can shatter the experience. Open Loot, a platform that has attracted more than 2.5 million registered users, is betting that its newly introduced OL Chain—a specialized Layer 3 appchain—can eliminate those frustrations once and for all. The chain is engineered for immediacy. A user presses “buy” on a rare NFT, and the transaction finalizes before the screen refreshes. No pending notifications, no anxious wait for network confirmation. For gamers accustomed to the stutter of congested blockchains, the difference is stark: OL Chain processes trades, mints, and in-game actions in real time, preserving the flow that keeps competitive play engaging. Speed, however, is only part of the equation. Security underpins every interaction. OL Chain inherits Ethereum’s battle-tested cryptographic framework while running a dedicated execution environment. Each block is publicly auditable, each signature cryptographically locked, offering players and developers a level of assurance that has often been elusive in decentralized ecosystems. Cost has long been another hurdle. OL Chain launches with zero gas fees, meaning users can acquire assets, upgrade inventories, or climb leaderboards without incremental charges eroding their gains. Looking ahead, the platform plans to introduce gas sponsorship, enabling studios to absorb transaction costs for entire communities. The result: a pathway to broader participation, unencumbered by the financial friction that has deterred casual entrants. Scalability rounds out the vision. OL Chain is built to handle surges in activity—thousands of simultaneous mints during a hot drop, millions of concurrent sessions across interconnected titles—without the bottlenecks that plague shared networks. Its architecture supports seamless asset portability, allowing a skin earned in one game to appear instantly in another, all recorded on a single, efficient ledger. For Open Loot, which styles itself as the “Steam of crypto,” OL Chain is more than infrastructure; it is a competitive moat. By prioritizing low latency, ironclad security, and negligible costs, the chain aims to attract both hardcore collectors and mainstream gamers wary of blockchain’s complexities. As the sector matures, platforms that deliver frictionless experiences may well define the next wave of adoption. More details are available at wiki.openloot.com/ol-chain. In the fast-evolving world of Web3 gaming, where digital assets change hands in seconds and player decisions hinge on split-second timing, even minor delays can shatter the experience. Open Loot, a platform that has attracted more than 2.5 million registered users, is betting that its newly introduced OL Chain—a specialized Layer 3 appchain—can eliminate those frustrations once and for all. The chain is engineered for immediacy. A user presses “buy” on a rare NFT, and the transaction finalizes before the screen refreshes. No pending notifications, no anxious wait for network confirmation. For gamers accustomed to the stutter of congested blockchains, the difference is stark: OL Chain processes trades, mints, and in-game actions in real time, preserving the flow that keeps competitive play engaging. Speed, however, is only part of the equation. Security underpins every interaction. OL Chain inherits Ethereum’s battle-tested cryptographic framework while running a dedicated execution environment. Each block is publicly auditable, each signature cryptographically locked, offering players and developers a level of assurance that has often been elusive in decentralized ecosystems. Cost has long been another hurdle. OL Chain launches with zero gas fees, meaning users can acquire assets, upgrade inventories, or climb leaderboards without incremental charges eroding their gains. Looking ahead, the platform plans to introduce gas sponsorship, enabling studios to absorb transaction costs for entire communities. The result: a pathway to broader participation, unencumbered by the financial friction that has deterred casual entrants. Scalability rounds out the vision. OL Chain is built to handle surges in activity—thousands of simultaneous mints during a hot drop, millions of concurrent sessions across interconnected titles—without the bottlenecks that plague shared networks. Its architecture supports seamless asset portability, allowing a skin earned in one game to appear instantly in another, all recorded on a single, efficient ledger. For Open Loot, which styles itself as the “Steam of crypto,” OL Chain is more than infrastructure; it is a competitive moat. By prioritizing low latency, ironclad security, and negligible costs, the chain aims to attract both hardcore collectors and mainstream gamers wary of blockchain’s complexities. As the sector matures, platforms that deliver frictionless experiences may well define the next wave of adoption. More details are available at wiki.openloot.com/ol-chain.

A New Layer in Blockchain Gaming: Open Loot’s OL Chain Seeks to Banish Lag and Fees

2025/11/08 20:00
OPEN-LOOT

In the fast-evolving world of Web3 gaming, where digital assets change hands in seconds and player decisions hinge on split-second timing, even minor delays can shatter the experience. Open Loot, a platform that has attracted more than 2.5 million registered users, is betting that its newly introduced OL Chain—a specialized Layer 3 appchain—can eliminate those frustrations once and for all.

The chain is engineered for immediacy. A user presses “buy” on a rare NFT, and the transaction finalizes before the screen refreshes. No pending notifications, no anxious wait for network confirmation. For gamers accustomed to the stutter of congested blockchains, the difference is stark: OL Chain processes trades, mints, and in-game actions in real time, preserving the flow that keeps competitive play engaging.

Speed, however, is only part of the equation. Security underpins every interaction. OL Chain inherits Ethereum’s battle-tested cryptographic framework while running a dedicated execution environment. Each block is publicly auditable, each signature cryptographically locked, offering players and developers a level of assurance that has often been elusive in decentralized ecosystems.

Cost has long been another hurdle. OL Chain launches with zero gas fees, meaning users can acquire assets, upgrade inventories, or climb leaderboards without incremental charges eroding their gains. Looking ahead, the platform plans to introduce gas sponsorship, enabling studios to absorb transaction costs for entire communities. The result: a pathway to broader participation, unencumbered by the financial friction that has deterred casual entrants.

Scalability rounds out the vision. OL Chain is built to handle surges in activity—thousands of simultaneous mints during a hot drop, millions of concurrent sessions across interconnected titles—without the bottlenecks that plague shared networks. Its architecture supports seamless asset portability, allowing a skin earned in one game to appear instantly in another, all recorded on a single, efficient ledger.

For Open Loot, which styles itself as the “Steam of crypto,” OL Chain is more than infrastructure; it is a competitive moat. By prioritizing low latency, ironclad security, and negligible costs, the chain aims to attract both hardcore collectors and mainstream gamers wary of blockchain’s complexities. As the sector matures, platforms that deliver frictionless experiences may well define the next wave of adoption.

More details are available at wiki.openloot.com/ol-chain.

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Bitcoin ETFs Record Strongest Inflows Since July, Push Holdings to New High

Bitcoin ETFs Record Strongest Inflows Since July, Push Holdings to New High

The post Bitcoin ETFs Record Strongest Inflows Since July, Push Holdings to New High appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In brief Bitcoin ETPs saw a net inflow of 20,685 BTC last week, driven mostly by U.S. ETFs. The recent uptick in investor risk appetite is driven by rate cut expectations and new crypto IPOs. Despite institutional demand outpacing new Bitcoin supply, realized and implied volatility remain historically low. Bitcoin exchange-traded products globally logged net inflows of 20,685 BTC last week, the strongest weekly intake since July 22, according to digital assets firm K33 Research. The renewed momentum lifted U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs’ combined holdings to 1.32 million BTC, surpassing the previous peak set on July 30. U.S. Bitcoin ETF products contributed nearly 97% of last week’s 20,685 BTC ETP inflows, highlighting the surge in demand ahead of the FOMC meeting.  Bitcoin ETF inflows “tend to be one of the key determinants of Bitcoin’s performance,” André Dragosch, head of research for Europe at Bitwise Investments, told Decrypt, adding that the “percentage share of Bitcoin’s performance explained by changes in ETP flows” has reached a new all-time high. Compared with Ethereum ETF flows, “there appears to be a ‘re-rotation’ from Ethereum back to Bitcoin in terms of investor flows,” Dragosch said, citing their data. “Over the past week, flows into Bitcoin ETFs have surpassed new supply growth by a factor of 8.93 times, a key tailwind for Bitcoin’s recent performance.”  Analysts at K33 agree, writing that flows have been a key driver of bitcoin’s strength since ETF approvals earlier last year, and the latest surge signals an acceleration in demand that could underpin further price support. In the last 30 days, investors accumulated roughly 22,853 BTC via various products, outpacing the new supply of 14,056 BTC. This rising risk appetite for Bitcoin has supported the recent recovery, Bitwise noted in its Monday report. Fidelity’s FBTC product accounted for a substantial…
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BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 10:19