Celebrity Life
Lonely Ape Dating Club: The First Dedicated Dating App for NFT Collectors
Riding high on the Valentineâs Day tide, the Metaverse has some good news for crypto enthusiasts and NFT collectors.
Why should an important date like Valentineâs Day not be celebrated in the virtual and digital world? When people are getting married in the Metaverse, it is time digital art collectors and NFT buffs get their own dating app as well.
Building on this concept, a dedicated dating app for NFT collectorsâLonely Ape Dating Clubâwill soon be launched.
Lonely Ape Dating Club: what we know
Who can join the app?
The first dating app solely for NFT collectors, it will be ready to roll out for the public in no time. Now, only those with at least one Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) NFT can join the app.
Interested NFT collectors can head over to the Lonely Ape Dating Clubâs official website to register on the waitlist and get early access.
How does the platform work?
Lonely Ape Dating Club comes with its set of differentiators and unique selling points which make it stand out from the other dating apps.
There is no need to enter or display personal information. Instead, one can link their crypto wallet to access the app. Once logged in, the users can display their net worth and NFT portfolio. You can also filter your matches by their cryptocurrency value and the NFT collection.
According to the press release by the website, ââCoin Diggerâ feature will allow non-BAYC owners to connect with higher net worth individuals for mutual benefit.â It also enables a âmatch to earnâ feature which allows one to earn tokens on interacting and engaging on the platform.
Users can gain the attention of others by sending them tips in crypto and showing off some cool metrics like how long you âdiamond handedâ or held on to your NFTs and personal net worth.
Masterminds behind Lonely Ape Dating Club
The dating platform is the brainchild of Year 4000 or popularly known as Y4K. Y4K is a group of hackers and NFT collectors who have seamlessly weaved the web 3.0 technology in the online dating sphere.
Lonely Ape Dating Club is being presented by BAYC owners and is gaining fast attention.
Just the way the world is adapting to the new way of looking at investments and assets, this step, too, has the potential to change the way we know online dating and perceive dating apps.
(Main and feature image credit: Lonely Ape Dating Club)
The post Lonely Ape Dating Club: The First Dedicated Dating App for NFT Collectors appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.
Justin Bieberâs Bored Ape Has a New Pal
Justin Bieber Enters the Bored Ape NFT Chat With $1.3 Million Purchase
7 of the Most Popular NFT Projects to Know About
There's no better way to mark the occasion than with good food â and lots of it. Here's our pick of the best Chinese New Year luxury puddings and treats.
With the start of the new lunar year just around the corner, stock up on the best desserts on offer. Turnip puddings (also called radish cakes) are traditional Chinese dim sum snacks, commonly served in Cantonese yum cha. Don't underestimate the small dish â in Cantonese, its name âleen gohâ or âloh bak gohâ is a homophone for âyear higherâ, ushering in new heights of prosperity for the coming year.
And we adore the Chinese New Year chuen hup, or traditional candy box, portion of the holiday. A bright red circular box set enticingly open upon coffee tables, filled with all kinds of sweet and savoury treats â it's a time-honoured custom, along with the coconut and turnip puddings. Each neat little segment houses a treat with an auspicious meaning of its own: lotus seeds are symbolic signs of improved fertility; lotus root, of love; tangerines and kumquats sound phonetically similar to "gold"; melon seeds to money and wealth. Chocolate coins, well, are coins.
To celebrate new beginnings and the new year, we've compiled the best Chinese New Year luxury puddings and treats for you and your loved ones to welcome the Year of the Tiger with.
The Best Chinese New Year Luxury Puddings and Treats
China Tang
China Tang's artisan Chinese New Year puddings are a modern take on the classic recipe, serving up two whole new flavours to welcome the Year of the Tiger: a turnip pudding with dried tiger prawn and local preserved meat and a handmade rice pudding with Taiwanese brown sugar and purple rice. Both are crafted by executive chef Menex Cheung and dim sum chef Mok Wing Kwai, and come in these stunning gift boxes decorated with China Tangâs signature Narcissus pattern â symbolizing grace and fortune. You can order the puddings and pick them up from the restaurant.
China Tang Landmark, Shop 411-413, 4/F, LANDMARK ATRIUM, 15 Queenâs Road Central, Central; +852 2522 2148
Duddellâs
Michelin-starred Duddell's selection of Chinese New Year puddings is a trio of classic favourite flavours: turnip (HK$348), taro (HK$348) and a "New Year" Pudding (HK$298). Pick up one, all three, or a gift set including the restaurant's signature X.O. Sauce. It's all packaged in a specially designed gift box created in collaboration with G.O.D. (Goods of Desire), with an ornate hand-drawn pattern typical of the embellishments found on Chinese teacups and soup bowls, a nod to its Hong Kong heritage. You can purchase at the restaurant or order online for delivery â find out more here.
We also love the look of the "Prosperous New Year Hamper", stocked with six traditional delicacies: a new year pudding; braised South African 5 head abalone with Duddellâs Abalone Sauce; a signature X.O. Sauce; homemade walnut cookies; Veuve Clicquot Ponsardin, Yellow Label Brut, Champagne; and Fook Ming Tong Fuding Jasmine Mao Feng Tea.
Duddellâs, 1 Duddell Street, Central; +852 2525 9191
Godiva
To no one's surprise, it's all about the chocolates at Godiva. The Belgian chocolatier has drawn up a new motif for the Year of the Tiger, auspicious red and gold packaging printed with swimming koi and a tiger portrait set amongst crackling fireworks as a symbolic image of wealth. For the chocolates, the bijou creations feature the same lucky tiger motif over the surface and are packed in three distinct flavours: Raspberry Orange White chocolate, Pecan PralinĂŠ Milk chocolate and 85% Dark Ganache chocolate. Order before 31 January to enjoy special offers including free gifts, including a complimentary box of chocolates, or 10% off any purchase of HK$688. Find out more and order here.
Godiva, various locations across Hong Kong
Little Bao
Little Bao is paying tribute to lucky colour red with a beetroot turnip cake, replacing turnip with fresh beetroot for a natural bold red cake. Ingredients include Sam Hing Lung rose wine sausages, Thai dried shrimp and natural seasoning for extra-healthy eating. You can also opt for the taro cake, made with Okinawan sweet potato and fresh taro for an extra soft and pillowy texture, and also to help boost the immune system. You can order them and more here.
Little Bao, 1-3 Shin Hing Street, Central; +852 6794 8414
Marco Polo Hongkong Hotel
Marco Polo Hongkong Hotel is celebrating the new lunar year with traditional Chinese recipes, serving up three classic puddings â a savoury Chinese Turnip Cake with Conpoy made from Chinese sausage and Jinhua ham; a sweet Coconut Pudding with Gold Leaf decorated with golden leaf glutinous rice and coconut milk; and a Water Chestnut Cake filled with crunchy water chestnut pieces. Bottles of homemade XO Chilli Sauce are also available to order. You can find out more here.
Marco Polo Hongkong Hotel, No. 3 Canton Road, Harbour City, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon; +852 2118 7283
Ming Court
Located inside Cordis, Michelin-starred Ming Court is offering an array of festive treats to ring in the Lunar New Year. Executive Chef Li Yuet Faat has prepared three auspicious puddings: a coconut Chinese New Year Pudding; an abalone, conpoy, and air-dried preserved meat and turnip pudding; and a red date and coconut pudding. Go for the deluxe Chinese New Year hamper, with a coconut pudding, homemade XO sauce, South African premium 12 head abalone and more. You can order it here.
Ming Court, Level 6, 555 Shanghai Street, Cordis, Mong Kok, Kowloon; +852 3552 3301Â
Rosewood Hong Kong
Rosewood Hong Kong is offering an array of Chinese New Year sets for gifting, featuring everything from traditional puddings to homemade XO sauce, festive candies, afternoon tea sets and more. Don't miss the well-wishes themed hampers: Harvest (HK$9,988), Fortune (HK$3,388), and Joy (HK$2,288) â for every CNY hamper purchased, Rosewood will donate 5% of the proceeds to support ImpactHK and their work to support those experiencing homelessness in Hong Kong. Find out more here.
We also love the clever Chinese New Year advent calendar from Rosewood â rather than counting down, you count on from the first day of the lunar calendar into the new Year of the Tiger. The whole set holds 15 special treats from the hotel, one for each day of the Chinese traditional holiday that lasts for two weeks. Tug open the jewel-toned drawers to discover a selection of delicious snacks from fortune cookies and egg rolls to XO sauce, palmiers, nougats, ginger candies and crunchy peanut bites. Much better than your usual melon seeds. You can order it here.
Rosewood Hong Kong, Victoria Dockside, 18 Salisbury Rd, Tsim Sha Tsui, Hong Kong, +852 3891 8732
Paul Lafayet
No crème brulĂŠe from Paul Lafayet this Chinese New Year. What you can get, though, is the patisserie's Lucky Tiger Gift Box with French illustrator Emilie Sarnel's hand drawing of two dancing tigers. The gift box set pulls open to reveal three different tiers featuring a whole afternoon experience: âCookirons" â a cookie-based iteration of the brand's famous macaron; jasmine and hojicha tea tins with pots of honey in the second and a special fine bone china porcelain dish at the base to hold it all. The plate is specially tailored to the Year of the Tiger, featuring a sketch of two smiling tigers amongst a flowery meadow filled with macarons. You can order it online here.
Paul Lafayet, various locations across Hong Kong
Saicho
So this might not fit into traditional Chinese candy boxes, but it will still sit very prettily amongst red-adorned decor around the home. For the Year of the Tiger, Saicho has launched a very special creation of only 900 bottles â Eight Immortals â featuring the special Dan Cong Oolong tea grown atop Phoenix Mountain's Tian Liao village in Guangdong. From harvest to roast and rolling, the Dan Cong Oolong leaves are looked after by a qualified tea master. The result is a fragrant blend that adheres to the leaves' distinct complexity: bright notes of ginger mango and tangerine that rounds into a bitterness, then herbal, the likes of anise, fennel and tarragon. With Eight Immortals' earthy savouriness, Saicho recommends pairing with traditional Chinese New Year dishes including Chinese steamed fish and tang yang (glutinous rice dumplings). You can shop Saicho's Chinese New Year selection here.
Smith & Sinclair
Candy box fillings will be extra exciting with the addition of Smith & Sinclair treats, they're made after your favourite tipples! The UK-based brand crafts vegan-friendly gummies â or "Edible Cocktails" â from anything, including classic Gin & Tonic to special concoctions like Passionfruit Mojito. For the Year of the Tiger, the brand has designed a special red, tiger-printed sleeve as a symbol of good luck and fortune. These can be fitted over any of Smith & Sinclair's nine signature sets, from spirit-based "Gin Obsessed" or "Tequila Time" to themed "Love Box" or "Night In". You can order and find out more here.
Sugarfina
Sugarfina's candy cubes are a delight, both to give and receive. For this Chinese New Year, the confectioner has crafted a series of Candy Bento Boxes for easy gifting (and enjoying!) â with anything from a single cube to a lucky set of eight, featuring the brand's sweet creations in fun, auspicious names. There's the Lotus Flowers flavoured with lychee, Tangerine Bears, berried-flavoured Royal Roses and Golden Pearls. If not for the sweets within, get this set for the beautifully artistic packaging: a hand-crafted shadow box of red and gold decor motifs of lanterns, flowers and a temple to mark new beginnings.
Sugarfina, various locations across Hong Kong
The Peninsula Boutique & CafĂŠ
One of the traditional elements of the Year of the Tiger is the big cat's head, symbolising strength and good health. Inspired by traditional Chinese "tiger head shoes" worn by children, the Peninsula Boutique & CafĂŠ is celebrating the new year with plenty of tiger head-decorated gift sets â you can hang the box up as a Chinese New Year decoration! Pick up the festive "Robust Tiger Gift Set" (with cookies, candies, chocolate, tea and more), and any of the Chinese New Year puddings. You can find out more here.
The Peninsula Boutique & CafĂŠ, The Peninsula Arcade, Salisbury Road, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon; +852 2696 6969
Venchi
You may be spoilt for choice with Venchi's range of Chinese New Year gift boxes, but one thing's for sure: the range of lucky red and gold packaging all feature the Italian brand's signature 140-years, Piedmont Master Chocolatiers-approved sweets. Pick up The Chinese New Year Double Layer Hexagon Gift Box, an extensive collection of the brand's favourite chocolates: Cremini, Chocoviar, Truffles, and Dubledoni. Or consider the Chinese New Year Round Hamper, which features Venchi's latest creation Gianduja N.3 with Hazelnut, and is a close replica of the traditional chuen hup with the rounded exterior and organised sections within.
Venchi, various locations across Hong Kong
Yat Tung Heen
Led by celebrated chef Tam Tung, Michelin-starred Yat Tung Heen is celebrating the new year by bringing back its highly sought-after turnip pudding, classic Chinese New Year pudding and the restaurant's signature gift box (which includes housemade premium XO sauce, candied walnuts and hand-selected Ginseng Oolong tea leaves). And to minimise the environmental impact of the gifting season, each pudding is thoughtfully packaged in a 100% recyclable eco-friendly paper box. You can find out more here.
Yat Tung Heen, Level B2, Eaton HK, 380 Nathan Road, Kowloon, Hong Kong, +852 2710 1093
Ying Jee Club
Two Michelin-starred Cantonese restaurant Ying Jee Club is serving the finest delectable pastry duo, a savoury turnip pudding with conpoy and air-dried meat and a sweet coconut milk pudding with red bean and Ceylon tea. Both are handcrafted daily by executive chef Siu Hin-Chi, who has amassed 20 Michelin stars over the past decade alone â rest assured, the preservative-free puddings epitomise the highest standard of Cantonese cuisine in both texture and flavour. You can order in-person at the restaurant, or by calling 2801 6882 or emailing reservation@yingjeeclub.hk â find out more here.
Ying Jee Club, Shop G05, 107 & 108, Nexxus Building, 41 Connaught Road Central; +852 2801 6882
(Hero image courtesy of Yat Tung Heen, featured image courtesy of Duddell's, image 1 courtesy of China Tang)
The post 7 of the Most Popular NFT Projects to Know About appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.
9 Celebrities Who Have Entered the NFT World, From Leo Messi to Justin Bieber
The hype around NFTs took off in 2021 and doesn't show any signs of slowing in 2022. Here are some of the noteworthy celebrities that have dipped their hand into the NFT pool.
You can't escape it: Every day, someone is talking about NFTs, the Metaverse or why cryptocurrency is the future of money. And since the release of Bored Ape Yacht Club, CryptoPunks and other recognisable NFTs, the digital art world has grown tremendously.
Whether they're your co-worker, a family member or a global superstar like Leo Messi, it seems like everyone, everywhere is jumping onto the trend. Even K-pop supergroup BTS is rumoured to be launching their own. In Hong Kong and around the globe, here are some of the biggest celebrities who have climbed aboard the NFT hype train.
Celebrities who have entered the NFT world
Shawn Yue Man-lok
Hong Kong actor and singer Shawn Yue Man-lok entered into the NFT world through a collaboration with Christieâs. The former model has been building his personal collection and showcased them in an online auction in September 2021. The collection included highly sought-after NFT pieces from Bored Ape Yacht Club, Cryptopunks and Meebits. On the big day, Yue celebrated his 40th birthday as well as raised revenue to be donated to Make-a-Wish Hong Kong foundation.
Justin Bieber
If, like millions of others, you follow Justin Bieber on Instagram, youâll probably have seen his collection of NFTs, especially of inBetweeners; Biebs has shown his love for the variety of colourful bear illustrations. The recently minted collection of 10,777 images created by artist Gianpiero, inBetweeners has also seen lots of love from other celebrities, including Tom Holland and Snoop Dogg.Â
Steph Curry
Not only have NFTs caught the attention of artists, they have also attracted numerous athletes. Golden State Warriors star Steph Curry personally released a collection of 2,974 NFTs, each priced at US$333. Curryâs collection features digital replicas of his shoe-line, Genesis Curry Flows, showcasing the exact pairs he wore for his incredible on-court feats. With the collection already sold out, the virtual sneakers promise his fans to use and show them off across multiple metaverses and virtual games.
Gunna
Atlanta rapper Gunna is the latest in the rap scene to purchase his own unique BAYC NFT. Revealing his purchase and tattoo process on Instagram, Gunna posted a video of how he did it through the cryptocurrency MoonPay, for US$300,000. His love for the digital art piece goes deep enough that he named the green-sunglassed Bored Ape âButtaâ â he even got it tattooed on his calf.
Lionel Messi
Metaverse? More like Messiverse. The man who many call âthe best footballer in the wordâ, Lionel Messi launched his NFT collection in August 2021. The collection featured three digital art pieces: "Man from the Future", "Worth the Weight" and "The King Piece", all created by artist BossLogic and depicting historic moments from the footballer's career. His star fame was on display as the NFTsâ sales spiked to US $3.4 million on the first day of the launch.
Jimmy Fallon
Celebrity and Tonight Show host Jimmy Fallon has been part of the NFT clan for a while. Fallon took to Twitter to share the latest addition to his collection, a simple Bored Ape, dressed in what appears to be a sailorâs outfit. The NFT was purchased for just over US$225,000.
Snoop Dogg
Snoop Dogg stepped into the NFT space with an introduction of his collection called âA Journey with the Doggâ. The collection is expected to include a path down the rapperâs experiences and greatest memories â think quotes and moments captured in pictures. It also features an original track titled âNFTâ, and a Dogecoin-inspired cryptocurrency, âSnoop Dogge Coinsâ. The artist expressed his passion for the launch, saying âIâve seen the game change over the years from analog to digital, and Iâm always happier when the technology lets the fans connect with the artists. NFTs are an amazing innovation, and it is an honor to do my first drop with Crypto.com/NFT.â
Hero image courtesy of Sebastien Muylaert/Getty Images, featured image courtesy of @leomessi
The post 9 Celebrities Who Have Entered the NFT World, From Leo Messi to Justin Bieber appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.
Bored Ape Yacht Club NFTs Worth US$2.2 Million Stolen From Collector
Shanyan Fok Koder and Richard Bassett explain how a Hong Kong art entrepreneur joined forces with a former special-forces soldier to launch a health and mental wellbeing app, Mentor360.
"Mental health and mental fitness are universal concerns," says Shanyan Fok Koder. "And regardless of your demographic, social status, your job or your age, itâs something everyone has to deal with."
Shanyan Fok Koder & Richard Bassett on Mental Health App Mentor360
The Mentor360 app dropped on World Mental Health Day in October, the cumulation of the last 20 months of work and conversations (usually across continents over Zoom) between former military man Richard Bassett and worldly art advisor Koder. A month later, Iâm sitting with both in a North London cafĂŠ talking over slices of pizza.
Their app, they hope, offers everyone a holistic 360 guide and framework to âfinding your formulaâ for mental and physical wellbeing. It uses a hybrid approach, with a core layer of clinicians and professional Mentors and then celebrity Ambassadors (whoâve publicly shared meaningful life stories) critical for building noise and momentum.
"Iâd been in the military for a long time. And there were a couple of incidents in my life that made me want to create something," Bassett, the CEO, explains. "Firstly, it was my father committing suicide. Then my son had a bit of misdirection. And several of my friends in the military had PTSD issues or adjustment disorders."
"The biggest issue is why people wouldnât come forward and say theyâve got a problem?â he asks.
âUnlike some apps, weâre not trying to get people hooked. Come on to it when you need itâ
â Richard Bassett
The answer often lay in culture, lack of education or concerns about privacy that prevent many from seeking help. With that came Bassettâs idea of creating an app that functions as a ânon-judgmental toolkitâ with content validated by experts â who include coaches, performance psychologists, mental health-specialising nurses and a clinical psychologist.
Bassetâs link with Koder came when his best friend, ex-special forces colleague and TV star Jason Fox, sat next to a pregnant Koder at a charity fundraiser for Born (which researches to prevent premature birth) in late 2019. As the pair talked about their passions for mental health and childrenâs wellbeing, the connection to Bassettâs idea became quickly apparent.
"Foxy told me that I have to meet his friend, Richard, whoâs building this app," Koder recalls. "I was always wanting to support things that are very meaningful and close to my heart ⌠and now Jason is actually our key mentor. The partnership between Richard and I was almost like two parts of a jigsaw puzzle come together."
Although some might go to the app for help with stress, trauma or even resources to help with suicidal feelings, Mentor360 is designed specifically as a three-dimensional offering that will also encourage fitness, workouts, performance and meditation or more clinical matters.
"We wanted to maintain the human factor as a constant throughout. So it feels like somebody has given you some advice rather than some process-driven machine learning," Bassett adds.
The co-founders might come from two different worlds, but the unlikely partnership speaks to the ubiquity of the issues at hand. Bassettâs 25-year military career saw him being appointed the first ever Command Sergeant Major within the UK Special Forces military group. "It was at that stage where I was asked if I wanted to run defence,â he says. âAt that point, I thought, Iâve kind of had my fill of the military now, itâs time to move on."
Koder meanwhile grew up in Hong Kong and the UK as the daughter of Li Ka-shingâs "right-hand man" Canning Fok, carving out a career in the arts and taking over her familyâs impressive collection. As a female art entrepreneur and mother, her challenges would be different.
"When I had the misfortune of losing three babies to miscarriage and dealing with that emotional fallout, it led me to want to support this as a cause," Koder divulges. "If thereâd been something like this app available to me, I donât think Iâd have suffered as much as I did emotionally. Itâs a topic thatâs still very taboo, even in this day and age ⌠and while you eventually find your own community, at the very beginning, you do feel very alone."
Both were clearly driven towards the app through deeply personal experiences. Bassett saw first-hand how soldiers whoâd done several tours in Iraq and Afghanistan suffered â his best friend, Fox, had left the forces with PTSD. Perhaps machismo or fear of institutional repercussions meant that the issue was often ignored or hidden in the military â but he hopes that Mentor360âs holistic approach can gently lead people to explore mental fitness alongside physical performance too.
The male-female perspectives of the pair offer a well-rounded, powerful tool. And while the wellness space is already crowded, Mentor360 stands out by being so broad, human-focused and non-prescriptive.
Thereâs been exciting traction too. Since its launch, the app has been downloaded in more than 176 countries, with the UK, the US and Australia leading. British schools have reached out and itâs one governance board away from being trialled within the National Health Service (NHS), which means added clinical risk management in the app. That has been an important validation, says Bassett, "especially when an institution like that has picked it out from a huge spectrum of apps on the market today."
Covid-19 and lockdowns have helped throw light on mental health, taking the conversation more mainstream. The timeliness has hit home; as Bassett says, âthereâs a lot of people now struggling with the transition between Covid and normalityâ.
Koder tells us that the plan is to serve individuals but also institutions such as the NHS and the military. Thereâs also the option of âwhite labellingâ it, so the app can be packaged and tailored to certain industries or corporate employees. In the future, might they look more global, with different languages and translations? Absolutely, the pair say, but theyâre taking it âslow and steadyâ. Thereâs been interest from American corporations and Koder says that sheâs keen to push into Asia very soon. Although going truly global might mean translating for languages, cultures and tone, as well as working with diverse psychologists, it remains a future ambition.
Mentor360 may be extra helpful in cultures where mental health is still relatively taboo. As Koder says, "I think, coming from our Asian culture, it speaks volumes to me â so much of our culture is about still performance or hiding a lot of what youâre feeling."
"Unlike some apps,â Bassett adds, "what weâre not trying to do is create a hook or get people hooked. Come on to it when you need it, and if you donât need it for a while because youâre good, you can just put it away ⌠Weâre starting to see those patterns in the trend analysis."
To get a little personal, I ask what works for them individually to keep a healthy mind and body. Bassettâs formula revolves around daily exercise, time with the family, dogs and good sleep â even the occasional glass of wine on the sofa in front of a crackling fireplace. Koderâs happiness hacks centre around motherhood, being content and at peace in her skin, and looking at life with a certain romanticism: "I always love to see the poetry in my day,â she says, "and I think itâs important to just pause throughout the day, check-in and acknowledge that Iâve achieved these things and I should be proud of myself, rather than just rushing on to the next thing."
The post Bored Ape Yacht Club NFTs Worth US$2.2 Million Stolen From Collector appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.
Joining the Metaverse, adidas Drops First NFT Collection
What Do Bored Ape Yacht Club, adidas, & Nike All Have in Common?
Why Bored Ape Yacht Club is the Latest NFT craze
For newborns to toddlers, here's our pick of the best Christmas gifts for the new bundles of joy in your life.
If you're struggling to shop for new babies and toddlers in your life â be it your own, or your friends and families, this is the guide for you. Don't settle for yet another plastic toy or Barbie doll. Here are a few more ideas you might have missed.
Keep scrolling to shop our selection of best gifts for babies and toddlers during the holiday season.
The post Why Bored Ape Yacht Club is the Latest NFT craze appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.