Recently, I've been playing cards with a few teachers in Renaiss, opening card packs and trying my luck. I can say it's been a lot of fun. Recently, a few partners have started asking me about Renaiss and its gameplay. I can clearly feel that the popularity of Renaiss is gradually rising, and more and more people are paying attention to it. Yesterday, Renaiss also arrived at Binance Square, so it can be said to be moving towards the stars and the sea. Here, let me briefly introduce @Renaiss Protocol .

If I had to summarize @Renaiss Protocol , it is not simply a project that 'sells NFTs' or 'creates RWA concepts', but rather attempts to address a more fundamental issue: how real-world collectibles can truly be brought onto the chain while possessing liquidity and financial attributes.

In the past few years, RWA and physical asset on-chain have been repeatedly mentioned, but most projects either remain at the conceptual level or simply turn 'asset certificates into NFTs', with the assets themselves still difficult to trade, opaque in pricing, and extremely illiquid. Renaiss has a clear entry point — starting with high-frequency, highly standardized physical collectibles, such as cards, trendy toys, and limited edition items, rather than jumping straight into real estate or bulk assets.

The core idea of Renaiss is not 'issuing an NFT means being on-chain', but rather constructing a whole set of infrastructure around physical collectibles: including physical custody, authenticity verification, standardized pricing, on-chain mapping, and secondary liquidity mechanisms. In other words, what users see on-chain is not an isolated NFT, but a digital asset unit backed by real assets that is verifiable and tradable.

A notable highlight of the project lies in its emphasis on 'liquidity'. The biggest issue with many RWA projects is not that the assets are worthless, but that no one can conveniently buy or sell them. Renaiss considered how to allow these physical collectibles to have a trading experience similar to on-chain assets from the very beginning, including fragmentation, market-making mechanisms, and the potential for integration with DeFi, which transforms collectibles from mere 'locked display items' into assets that can participate in broader on-chain financial activities.

From a positioning perspective, Renaiss is not aiming to be a short-term speculation project for ordinary speculators, but rather to build a bridge connecting the physical collectibles market with crypto finance. It focuses on long-term issues: How assets are trusted, priced, and efficiently circulated. This infrastructure-oriented, long-term value approach also determines that its pace will not be particularly 'fast', but logically solid.

Overall, the highlight of Renaiss Protocol is not a single feature, but rather its systematic reconstruction of the pathway for bringing physical collectibles on-chain. If RWA truly enters a stage of large-scale implementation in the future, projects that start from real demand and emphasize the asset and liquidity closed loop will be worth continued attention.