Can't get tickets and still have to be scalped: I used FanTokens + $ATM at the coffee shop to force 'remote fans' into Atletico Madrid's locker room
Last weekend, I was watching a game at a coffee shop in Taipei, and the two people at the next table were arguing fiercely: one said, 'Atletico Madrid's away jersey this season is as ugly as workwear', and the other retorted, 'You can't even buy a ticket, what are you complaining about the jersey for?'. It was quite heart-wrenching to listen to — that's reality, you love a team, but you're thousands of miles away from the stadium, waiting for sea freight to buy merchandise, fighting for tickets with quick reflexes, and whatever decisions the club makes, you can only brush a '???' under social media. The most painful thing for fans is not losing games, but 'I can only watch from the sidelines'.
This is also the pain point that made me start to seriously look at Fan Tokens to see whether they are 'selling emotions' or providing a real channel for participation. fantokens positions itself as 'The Official Fan Tokens Hub', emphasizing coverage of real-time news, price, trading volume changes, and market sentiment, and has written 'Trusted by 80+ global sports brands' and 'Backed by official partnerships with PSG, Manchester City, Barcelona, UFC...' which is a very straightforward endorsement. You can understand it as a 'fan asset market terminal + information flow entry': you don't need to go back and forth between dozens of exchanges and information sites, first scan the overall market's heat, fluctuations, and changes in trading volume here, and then decide whether to 'rush in with emotions' or 'calm down and just participate in voting' today.