Poker runs on cash, chips, and trust. Solana just bet it can run on crypto too.
What The Deal Actually Does
The Solana Foundation is the nonprofit behind the Solana blockchain. It also backs the SOL token.
Now it's teaming up with the World Series of Poker. Its logo will show up on the broadcast and even on the table felt.
This is the first time the series has allowed crypto buy-ins. For a brand this old, that's a big shift.
The real move is in the money. Players can now pay with SOL or with Solana-based stablecoins.
Those are coins tied to the dollar. Best of all, there are zero fees to enter.
The crypto firm MoonPay runs the payments behind the scenes. The buy-ins are live right now at the summer series in Las Vegas.
That summer run is the 57th edition of the series. It's playing out at two big card rooms on the Las Vegas Strip.
Cash-outs in stablecoins come next. Winners will get their money on the Solana network starting in December.
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Why Poker Players Are The Target
This is less about poker and more about reach. Solana wants to get in front of people who move money fast.
Poker players are exactly that crowd. They chase speed and hate paying fees.
Solana's product chief, Vibhu Norby, says the goal is simple. He wants to cut the friction in how money moves through poker.
Players like to keep their funds working, he notes. Zero-fee entries and instant payouts fit that perfectly.
MoonPay's commerce boss, Jim Walker, calls crypto "a natural fit." He points to fast, borderless payments for players anywhere.
Norby sees a chance to grow both sides at once. He wants more poker players in crypto, and more crypto fans at the table.
Solana is built for fast, cheap payments. That makes near-instant payouts an easy promise to keep.
A normal payout can mean waiting days for a wire. That delay hits players from other countries hardest.
A Huge Stage For The Pitch
The series is a massive platform. It runs about 50 events around the world.
It has paid out more than $4 billion in prizes over the years. The famous Main Event alone costs $10,000 to enter.
TV coverage of this year's Main Event starts July 2. Millions will see the Solana name on screen.
The two sides also plan to build poker games on the blockchain. That would push Solana even deeper into the sport.
Worth Noting
The big question is trust. Old habits and cash still rule most card rooms.
Crypto has to prove it's faster and safer before players switch. That won't happen overnight.
The first real test comes in December. That's when the first stablecoin payouts hit players' wallets.
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