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Mona Is Building a Limitless Metaverse

The creator platform – a finalist in the Consensus Pitch Fest this week – has no end of land for sale and charges no fees for participation.

(Melody Wang/CoinDesk)
(Melody Wang/CoinDesk)

In the real world, land is a limited resource because the planet is finite and therefore so are its natural resources. That’s in part why Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos are exploring space. So here’s a question: In the virtual world, space is theoretically limitless, so why is land so expensive and hard to buy in the metaverse?

This article is part of Road to Consensus.

For Justin Melillo, co-founder and CEO of Mona, this contrivance doesn't make sense. “Artificial scarcity is just silly,” he said, criticizing platforms fueled by “land” speculation. In the Monaverse platform, there are no limits on land and no required fees to enter. Creators can access the platform through their web browser.

Mona is one of eight finalists in the inaugural Web 3 Pitch Fest, which is being hosted by Extreme Tech Challenge and CoinDesk and is part of the Consensus Festival in Austin, Texas. It was launched in 2021 by creators, for creators, Melillo said. He is a 3D visual artist who makes animated films, including work on “Abominable”and “The Croods 2” for DreamWorks, and immersive augmented reality and virtual reality experiences.

Before starting Mona, he worked at Magic Leap where he contributed to the creation of Mica, an artificial-intelligence virtual assistant. His cofounder and COO is also visual artist, Matt Hoerl, who holds 11 patents in the realm of virtual and augmented reality and serves as chief operating officer.

The co-founders determined that what would serve creators best is to allow creators to build and own their work but share it as part of an open, social metaverse. Mona spaces are unique 3D environments that creators build and mint on the Ethereum or Polygon blockchains. And they are interoperable across the metaverse, with portals to connect to other spaces within the Monaverse or other platforms like Decentraland and CryptoVoxels.

Since the launch, more than 3,000 creators have jumped aboard. “The metaverse doesn’t have to belong to big tech companies,” Melillo said in a statement. “It can, and will, be a place for everyone.”

See also:CoinDesk’s Metaverse Week

Visual art is not Mona’s only medium. Melillo is also excited about Mona’s inclusion as a flagship platform for Elvis On-Chain, a multi-metaverse NFT launch including exclusive spaces, events and wearables for Elvis fans. Even though the King has been dead for more than 40 years, there are hundreds of fan clubs worldwide – reported to be as high as 400 just five years ago – not to mention Baz Luhrmann’s “Elvis” biopic starring Tom Hanks currently in theaters. Looks like the potential for the open metaverse is all shook up.

UPDATE 22:59 UTC: This post was corrected.

Jeanhee Kim

Jeanhee Kim was CoinDesk's senior editor for lists, rankings and special projects. She is a veteran journalist and special projects editor who launched the Forbes Asia inaugural 100 to Watch in 2021, Forkast.News' Blockchain in Asia series, and edited the Crain's New York Business 40 Under 40, Fast 50 and Most Powerful Women. She has previously worked for Forbes Asia, Forkast.News, Crain's New York Business, FamilyMoney.com, Oxygen Media's ka-Ching.com, and Money magazine as an editor, producer or reporter. Her family owns BTC, ETH, SOL and CARD above the $1,000 threshold.

Jeanhee Kim