We can argue the semantics all we want here. But facts remain a large VR sale occurred. It's going to get industry press and it will likely influence investors one way or another like most sizable transactions tend to do in our industry. People discussing a notable sale is not hype. You may not like the way "First" invested
their money in VRVR.com but it is dismissive to allude to their investment methods as "uneducated" just because you don't see vrvr.com as being a $40,000 domain name. Real money for a great, short, VR name did exchange hands.
It is everyone's goal in the stock markets or domain market to identify trends and take advantage of them before it becomes price prohibitive and to eventually capitalize. In any market there are signals we wait for. You probably focus your investment in certain niches because over the years you've received signals from the market that this is a good investment. There is money to be made here. VR is in a very very early stage and for those of us who invested early... every sale is a signal as we decide how to play out hands. For those who are on the sideline waiting for more information as to whether or not enter this niche... this can be interpreted as a signal. VR isn't some hype. This sale isn't some hype. There is no exaggeration in the sales price of VRVR.com or the $120 Billion dollar industry that VR and AR are expected to be.
I've made it a policy of mine in not posting offers I've received but only sales and I'll just say this... the "VR" is just getting started!
#HypeMan
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