DeMR Tile
Last updated
Last updated
DeMR Network follows the definition in an open source protocol H3 (https://h3geo.org/) to index tiles. In this protocol, the space is split into adjacent hexagonal tiles, each of which is called a DeMR Tile. In the hierarchical design of H3, adjacent tiles can be combined to a larger Tile.
The opening of tiles is strictly controlled. Users are not allowed to collect information on tiles that are not open. Tiles of restricted countries or regions, including the US, China, private areas, etc., will never be opened. DeMR will restrict users' operations based on IP or GPS. If it is found that the user's location is not in the designated open area, the user will not be able to upload data.
Famous Landmarks such asVirtual Singapore's Web3 District, Tokyo's Anime City, and Universal Studios scenes can be transferred to DeMR Tiles of various sizes (Except for restricted countries or regions, including the US, China, private areas, etc). Each DeMR Tile can make different profits according to the business property, cultural value, and popularity of the corresponding landmark, and thus has different pricing in the market.
A DeMR Tile has different states in its life-cycle from undeveloped to minted to support MR experience. The following colors and icons represent different states of a Tile: