In the past, the biggest fear when buying a house was encountering a real estate agent who talks a lot but doesn't tell you whether the property rights are clean. Now, these RWA projects are no better; they issue tokens and claim to put real estate on the blockchain, but behind the scenes, everything is a black box, and the actual documents are locked away in a lawyer's safe gathering dust.
Integra @integra_layer has a bit of an interesting approach. They've created an "Asset Passport (Asset Passport)."
This thing completely rewrites the rules of the game.
It encapsulates the property's entire history—ownership structure, valuation data, audit reports—all into one package. This is no longer simple tokenization; it's like giving each piece of rebar and concrete a "Holographic Digital Identity Card." Without this certificate, so-called RWA is just an unredeemable electronic receipt; with it, trust becomes programmable code.
They didn't jump into the popular public chains; instead, they chose Cosmos SDK + Ethermint. It's like building your own independent kingdom with walls rather than setting up a stall on someone else's turf. For heavily regulated industries like real estate, what’s needed is this kind of "sovereign-level security."
Look at that City Builder—on the surface, it's a game, but underneath, it transforms your on-chain actions into reputation credentials (Social XP). Although the wave of 10x bonuses on January 10th has just passed, this method of tying "people" behavior to the liquidity of "properties" is the core logic of $IRL .
Stop blindly trusting projects that only want to issue tokens. The real RWA revolution often wears a serious face full of paperwork.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
In the past, the biggest fear when buying a house was encountering a real estate agent who talks a lot but doesn't tell you whether the property rights are clean. Now, these RWA projects are no better; they issue tokens and claim to put real estate on the blockchain, but behind the scenes, everything is a black box, and the actual documents are locked away in a lawyer's safe gathering dust.
Integra @integra_layer has a bit of an interesting approach. They've created an "Asset Passport (Asset Passport)."
This thing completely rewrites the rules of the game.
It encapsulates the property's entire history—ownership structure, valuation data, audit reports—all into one package. This is no longer simple tokenization; it's like giving each piece of rebar and concrete a "Holographic Digital Identity Card." Without this certificate, so-called RWA is just an unredeemable electronic receipt; with it, trust becomes programmable code.
They didn't jump into the popular public chains; instead, they chose Cosmos SDK + Ethermint. It's like building your own independent kingdom with walls rather than setting up a stall on someone else's turf. For heavily regulated industries like real estate, what’s needed is this kind of "sovereign-level security."
Look at that City Builder—on the surface, it's a game, but underneath, it transforms your on-chain actions into reputation credentials (Social XP). Although the wave of 10x bonuses on January 10th has just passed, this method of tying "people" behavior to the liquidity of "properties" is the core logic of $IRL .
Stop blindly trusting projects that only want to issue tokens. The real RWA revolution often wears a serious face full of paperwork.