Welcome to This Week in the Metaverse, where Fortune rounds up the most interesting news in the world of NFTs, culture, and the metaverse. Email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. with tips.

NFTs got some good news this week: After months of uncertainty and skittishness, the overall market jumped 137% quarter-over-quarter to an eye-popping $4.7 billion. Also, individual sales rose 8.56%, according to a report by DappRadar

This fresh sense of excitement in the NFT space was exemplified by Tyler Hobbs QQL: Analogs exhibition (open until April 22), which I attended last week at Pace Gallerys location on west 25th Street in New York City. The exhibition, which was a part of Pace Verso, the gallerys Web3 hub, showed a bunch of Hobbs work in the form of physical paintings, some created by the Brooklyn-based team at Artmatr.

The buzz at the event showed just how important the sense of community is among many of those in the NFT spaceand how physical forms highlighting NFTs can drum up interest among non-crypto crowds. 

I spoke to one local artist who had no idea what NFTs werejust a contract to me, she saidbut who added that she was intrigued by one of Hobbs paintings and wanted to learn more about it.

In my mind, NFT creative art for the sake of art is having a resurgence, even as creator fees decline and Blur has overtaken OpenSea in trading volume recently (OpenSea still has more users). 

Hobbs tends to agree with my view, I think. Although hes been offline for the past four months and couldnt comment directly on current market dynamics, he said he was happy to return to his painting roots for the exhibition and for people to experience it in a different way.

People know me for my purely digital generative workreally well at this pointbut I still have a really strong attachment to painting, he told me, and I still find theres something really special about work like this and the way that you get to interact with it in person at scale and to take in all the details.

Thats it for this week, but if youre in New York next week, happy NFT.NYC! Maybe Ill see you there.

In other news

The Drone Racing League will soon become the first sports property to stream its entire season in the metaverse. Following the 2022-23 DRL Algorand World Championship Race Finals on April 8, the league said it will host a two-day metaverse marathon where fans can watch the entire 2022-2023 season of races, where drones loop and dive through real-life courses at 90 mph.

By clicking a link on social media, users also can enter a digital twin of the Drone Racing League Simulator video games popular MegaCity map, where theyll have the chance to meet champion pilots. 

Drone racing in the metaverse.

Courtesy of DRL

DJ and self-labeled eco-warrior BLOND:ISH is releasing a biodegradable PHA Vinyl recordthat also features an NFT. Made in collaboration with the artists nonprofit, Bye Bye Plastics, the record uses naturally occurring bacteria to compose the the 14-track vinyl of her record #PlasticFreeParty. The NFTs will be sold in a 72-hour-long saleeach for 0.04ETHon sound.xyz, on April 11. Each NFT purchased will be redeemable for a physical copy of the bio vinyl.

Courtesy of BLOND:ISH

Web3 collectible card game Wildcard is hosting its first public mint on April 20, via Magic Eden, for a series of 4,444 NFT WildPasses on the Polygon blockchain. The NFTs will give buyers access to holder-only airdrops, priority access to playtesting, and early access to ownership opportunities within the Wildcard Universe. The WildPass also will offer exclusive private developer access, such as holder-only roundtable discussions, roadmap sneak peeks, and more.


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