Come closer, friend let me explain Walrus like we’re having chai in Peshawar.
Everyone says “NFTs = ownership”, but most people still lose their collectibles when IPFS links die, Arweave costs explode, or platforms shut down. You paid thousands for a JPEG or video then one day it’s gone or the metadata is corrupted. That’s not ownership.
Walrus (@Walrus 🦭/acc l) fixes it. Decentralized storage on fast Sui blockchain. Your digital collectible files (images, videos, 3D models, music, metadata) get split across thousands of nodes using “Red Stuff” erasure coding. Even if 50%+ nodes disappear, the file rebuilds perfectly. It’s cheap, permanent, private, fast, and on-chain verifiable anyone can prove the data is exactly what you minted, untampered, forever.
Real data today (23 Jan 2026): $WAL ≈ $0.149–$0.156, market cap ~$235–$246M, circulating supply ~1.58B tokens, 24h Binance volume ~$20–$22M (WAL/USDT active). Over 1B $WAL staked, fees burn tokens more collectibles stored = scarcer supply.
Pudgy Penguins already migrated all their media to Walrus if it works for one of the biggest collections, it works for yours. a16z called it key infra in 2026 outlook.
Visuals to add:
Red Stuff erasure coding diagram
Pudgy Penguins NFT media example on Walrus
Current price chart
I hold $WAL because this isn’t hype it’s real ownership for digital collectibles.
You own NFTs/collectibles?
Ever lost one to dead link or shutdown?
Would you move to Walrus for true permanence?
Holding $WAL? Tell me honestly I’m listening!

