The first wave of blockchain fundraising was the ICO. It began in 2017 with the introduction of Ethereum’s ERC-20 token standard, which allowed for the creation of a new class of digital assets: utility tokens. These tokens gave their holders access to a service or product, and were sold to investors as an investment opportunity. The second wave was IEOs (Initial Exchange Offering). IEOs are similar to ICOs but instead of selling tokens on a startup landing page, they are listed directly on exchanges like Binance or Bitfinex, which immediately provides access to a huge number of investors. The third wave was STOs (Security Token Offerings), where companies issue their own tokens that are backed by equity, debt, or real assets, rather than providing access to a service or product. The fourth wave was IDOs (Initial Decentralized Exchange Offering), similar to an IEO, but on a decentralized exchange like UniSwap or PancakeSwap. The fifth wave is the ITO, or Initial Tile Offering, where a project sells virtual real estate parcels on blockchains such as Ethereum, where NFTs represent ownership rights over these parcels. The ITO has been pioneered by the new major metaverse project, Next Earth. What Exactly is an Initial Tile Offering? A brief history lesson of the metaverse: In the early 2000s, a group of computer scientists and entrepreneurs created a virtual world called Second Life. It was an online world wher...