I read online from some NFT holders concern about not being able to see their assets. This is related to OpenSea being unable to transfer the actual NFT to an Ethereum wallet. Bottom line it appears OpenSea is not a decentralized platform and that all of the NFTs on its platform is tracked via an internal database. The database searches for NFTs from multiple blockchains and loads local images of the NFTs on its platform. This made me wonder where do our Splinterlands cards come from?
Amazon CloudFront
I myself not a programmer and simply looked through card images and right clicked. I found that they came through on CloudFront.
Then I took a deeper dive into seeing how I could get stats on my cards and found this as a core link:
https://steemmonsters.com/cards/metadata?id=xxx
Where you have to replace "xxx" with the code name of your card. Each card has a independent Card ID.
Using Kobold Miner as an example this is how my card looks at level 4.
https://steemmonsters.com/cards/metadata?id=C-UYQ1Y55CN4
Click on link above has this populate:
From there it has a link image directly to where the level 4 Goblin Miner would be saved:
The links appear to still reference "steemmonsters" the original name of the game prior to changing to splinterlands. Out of curiosity I replaced the name to splinterlands in the links and can confirm they direct to nothing.
Conclusions
It is interesting that the old pieces of the game still remains, such as a steemmonsters link. To see if even the latest Chaos Legions cards are linked it is clear that they are when I did a test run.
Its pretty cool to see where the cards images originate from and how it has evolved over the years.
Until next time thanks for reading!!!
I have plenty of other cards for rent! Just go on peakmonsters and check out the market place and if you are curious what I offer here is a link: