The EasyA Consensus Hackathon, hosted on May 14-16 in Toronto, was the largest blockchain-related hackathon in North American history â and its organizers, brothers Phil and Dom Kwok, are planning on going even bigger next year in Miami.
âWe had some really good results, really cool projects,â the duo told CoinDesk in an interview recently. Over 1,000 developers joined the event, all of whom were carefully vetted beforehand. Applicants had to demonstrate their coding experience via their GitHub and LinkedIn pages, the aim being to enlist developers with a proven track record. âThatâs why so many of the projects are really outstanding this year,â EasyA chief operating officer Dom Kwok said.
The potential prize? Millions of dollars in funding, courtesy of five blockchain networks: Aptos, Stellar, Polkadot, Bahamut and Forte.
The highlight of the conference, however, was when representatives of Universal Studios invited one of the projects (ApTap, which won first place in the Aptos track) to showcase what they built to Universalâs executive team in Orlando. âThat was crazy,â EasyA CEO Phil Kwok said.
With a community counting over 1 million developers, EasyA is one of the worldâs largest and most popular Web3 learning apps. The firm has organized over 30 hackathons since it was founded in 2019.
The winners of the Toronto hackathon were determined by teams behind the blockchain they were building on. Each network had its own mission statement â Stellarâs, for example, was âWeb3 UX doesnât have to suck. Prove it.â The overall goal is to continue funding the winning projects over a long period of time, which means that the bulk of the reward prize is actually distributed further down the line.
âDevelopers donât just come to these hackathons, win prizes and then go on to the next one. Like many others, the goal of our hackathons is to make sure that people actually continue to build and add long-term value to crypto,â Dom Kwok said.
As previously mentioned, ApTap, a project that makes it extremely easy for users to access their Aptos wallet on their phone, made it to first place on the Aptos track. Stellarâs winner, CycleBuddy, helps women track their menstrual cycle while earning tokens. On Polkadot, Sutanpu, an app that enables travellers to mint NFTs of the places they visit, took the crown. Bahamut, a relatively new blockchain, gave the big prize to NameVault, a decentralized naming service akin to Ethereumâs ENS Domains. Finally, a protocol that aims to make airdrop allocation smoother, GASS, came in first on Forte.
Other winners include:
- On the Aptos track: AptosAI Guard and MMO.
- On the Stellar track: FailSafe, Borrowhood, Automated Savings Policy and OrbitSwap.
- On the Polkadot track: DotStriker, Merge Fund, Proctodot, SmartTrust and Ratezilla.
- On the Bahamut track: MilkyPay and Fast Credit.
- On the Forte track: VYB and MLOps.