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Hot Wheels NFT Garage: All You Need to Know About Mattel's Biggest IP in Web3

With Series 6 dropping this week, here's how Mattel's iconic collectibles have found their audience onchain.

Digital collectibles is one of the things in NFTs that have been steadily growing in 2023 despite the bear market.

As the name implies, these NFTs are intended for existing communities of collectors: People who love a brand or IP and want to interact with it on a deeper level.

Mattel's Hot Wheels NFT Garage is a great example of such project: Iconic die-cast cars a lot of us played with as kids are now put onchain, which makes owning, collecting and trading much easier. Besides, these NFTs enable you to get rare IRL models too—a dream for any collector.

As the sixth season of Hot Wheels NFTs approaches its launch date on August 31, 9:00 AM PT, here’s everything you need to know about this project.

How Hot Wheels NFT Garage Works

The ‘phygital’ project was first announced in 2021 on the Wax blockchain. It has since bridged to Flow—the blockchain focused on mainstream projects—to make collecting as easy and smooth as possible.

The idea is simple: you buy a pack of unrevealed NFTs. When you unpack it, you get a set of 4 to 10 random cars of different rarities, depending on the type of pack you got. While they’re primarily virtual collectibles, cars of the ‘premium’ and ‘NFTH’ rarities could be redeemed for physical versions.

Needless to say, these physical models have also become valuable off-chain collectibles. With only 3000 made of the premium cars and 1500 of the NFTH cars, the redeemed cars can sell for a premium. For instance, scoring a Series 4 ‘69 Copo Corvette costs you over $200 on eBay!

Mattel Creations Virtual Marketplace

You can also expand your collection by trading the collectibles on Rarible-powered secondary market. Urgently need a Buick Grand National? Say no more.

Series 1-5: Quick summary

Series 1 to Series 3 were released on the Wax blockchain, and can be bridged to Flow where the collection is now hosted. Those series featured classic Hot Wheels cars (Deora II, Twin Mill, and Bone Shaker), real-world vehicles (Bugatti Chiron and Lamborghini Sián FKP 37) and a variety of retro-inspired cars marking the 50th anniversary of Hot Wheels.

Series 4 was the first to be hosted on the Flow blockchain, with the McLaren P1 as the main highlight. Series 5, which was sold out in mintures, featured future-facing cars like the Aston Martin Vulcan.

In addition to the regular seasons, Hot Wheels has also released special feature drops, such as the NFT Garage and the Fast & Furious collaboration featuring Dominic Toretto’s legendary 1970 Dodge Charger and other iconic cars from the movie franchise, all of which sold out in under 5 minutes.

What will Series 6 bring?

Mattel recently announced Hot Wheels NFT Garage Series 6. The series is confirmed to feature a new type pack ($80) which guarantees you an extraordinary die-cast car along the standard one ($25), and include rarities like a 1988 Jeep Wagoneer and an Aston Martin V12 Speedster.

The countdown to Series 6 launch is live on the Mattel website, and, looking at recent Hot Wheels drops, it is likely to sell out quick. Don't worry about missing it, though—once Series 6 is live, you'll be able to find NFTs from it on the secondary marketplace (just click on the dropdown menu and select the Series you need).

As for now, strap in and get ready!