Esports isn’t just about the arena anymore—it’s moving into a new era, built on decentralized tech that’s actually designed to stick around. Team Liquid, one of the biggest names in the game, is moving a massive 250TB of their most valuable content over to Walrus. That’s not just old match replays or behind-the-scenes footage; it’s the heart of their brand, all shifting from fragile, scattered storage to a network that’s tough and distributed.

This isn’t your basic backup. Walrus takes all those files and turns them into onchain objects you can actually use, ready to plug into smart contracts. Then there’s AI meta-tagging from Zarklab—suddenly, you can find anything instantly, no more endless searches through old hard drives. Teams everywhere get fine-tuned control over who sees what, with zero single points of failure. It’s not just about keeping stuff safe; it’s about saving the things that matter, whether it’s for future documentaries or building a legacy for fans.

And it scales. Walrus handles heavy traffic—think 25 million ad impressions every day for projects like Alkimi Exchange. Plus, with Seal, you get programmable privacy that’s already running over 70,000 decryption requests across more than 20 live apps. For creators and businesses, this isn’t just storage—it’s control over your own data, built to grow, easy to prove, and ready for whatever comes next.


@Walrus 🦭/acc $WAL #Walrus