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  • Briq (BRIQ)

    1/1/1901 00:00 UTC

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    Briq News

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    Overview

    Briq (often styled “briq”) is an NFT building protocol where people create digital objects from tiny on‑chain blocks called “briqs.” You can assemble briqs into a 3D set, mint that set as an NFT, later break it apart, and reuse the same briqs to build something new. This simple loop—build, mint, dismantle, rebuild—makes Briq feel like digital LEGO on the blockchain. The protocol lives on Starknet, an Ethereum Layer 2 (L2) that offers low fees and fast confirmations, so creating and editing NFTs stays smooth and affordable. (starknet.io)

    Briq sits across creative tech and onchain gaming. Because everything is stored as smart contracts, your creations are portable, composable, and verifiable. There isn’t a separate “BRIQ token” used as currency for the protocol; instead, the core building blocks themselves are tokens. As a result, there is no on‑exchange BRIQ price to track today. That said, collectors still refer to the “Briq blockchain” experience when they talk about building, trading sets, or using briqs inside Starknet games and art drops. (starknet.io)

    What makes Briq different

    • Composable NFTs: briqs are ERC‑1155‑style tokens that can be assembled into ERC‑721 set NFTs, then disassembled at any time. This keeps digital items flexible and reusable. (github.com)
    • On‑chain creativity: shapes, booklets (instructions), and boxes (pack drops) live on the network, so builds are open and verifiable. (github.com)
    • Low‑fee building: running on Starknet helps make frequent building and rebuilding practical. (starknet.io)

    History & Team

    Origins

    Briq launched publicly in 2021 as one of the early creative apps on Starknet. The project’s goal was to let anyone “make NFT matter” using small on‑chain pieces, then share or trade those creations. (dappland.com)

    Founders

    Briq was co‑founded by Sylve Chevet and Lancelot de Ferrière. Chevet has been active in Starknet governance and previously worked at Ledger; he’s also recognized by the Starknet Foundation as a Builders’ Council facilitator. (starknet.io)

    Investors and backers

    Fabric Ventures lists Briq (briq.construction) in its portfolio, highlighting the company’s roots in on‑chain gaming and creation. Public pages from Fabric also name the two co‑founders. (fabric.vc)

    Note: There are other companies named “Briq” on the internet, including a construction‑finance SaaS firm and a real‑estate tokenization startup. Those are unrelated to the Starknet NFT protocol covered here. The investors and details for those companies (Tiger Global, etc.) should not be confused with Briq’s NFT building protocol. (briq.com)

    Technology & How It Works

    Briq is built for Starknet and written in Cairo, Starknet’s native language. The protocol uses several contracts that work together to turn many small tokens into one composable NFT—and back again. (github.com)

    Core contracts

    • briq token (ERC‑1155‑like): This tracks the “materials.” Each briq has a material (such as color or texture). The contract interface is material‑based instead of a classic ERC‑1155 token‑ID list. (github.com)
    • set NFT (ERC‑721‑like): This holds assembled creations. When you mint a set, the set contract becomes owner of the included briqs; when you dismantle, the briqs return to your wallet. (github.com)
    • box NFT (ERC‑1155): Used for genesis or themed “boxes” that can be unboxed to receive briqs and a booklet. (github.com)
    • booklet NFT (ERC‑1155): Think of it like an instruction manual or design recipe tied to certain shapes. (github.com)
    • attributes registry and shape contracts: These add on‑chain metadata and validate 3D shapes for set NFTs. (github.com)

    These contracts run on Starknet mainnet with published addresses, and the builder dapp renders your design with a 3D interface so you can visualize, mint, or refactor your set. (github.com)

    The building loop

    1. Acquire briqs via a box drop or marketplace; 2) open the builder and place briqs in 3D space; 3) mint the design as a set NFT; 4) if you want to change it, break the set and reuse the same briqs in a new build. Because everything is on‑chain, this loop is permissionless and easy to verify. (starknet.io)

    Why Starknet

    Starknet’s validity rollup design gives low fees and fast UX while settling to Ethereum for security. That helps Briq support frequent edits and saves costs when creators experiment with many drafts. (support.argent.xyz)

    Tokenomics & Utility

    There is no separate fungible “BRIQ token” for the protocol at this time, so when people say “Briq tokenomics,” they are usually talking about how briqs, sets, boxes, and booklets behave as tokens in the system. Dappland, Starknet’s official dapp directory, also shows “Has a token? Not yet.” for the project. (dappland.com)

    The briq model (how value flows inside the app)

    • briqs are the base resource. They are ERC‑1155‑style items with materials, and they are the parts you compose into creations. (github.com)
    • sets are ERC‑721 NFTs that represent finished builds. They “own” the briqs used in the build until you disassemble them. (github.com)
    • boxes and booklets distribute briqs and designs. Opening a box yields briqs plus a booklet that may guide a themed build. (github.com)

    Because Briq doesn’t have a tradeable BRIQ token, there is no BRIQ price on crypto exchanges today. Instead, pricing happens at the level of briq materials, themed boxes, or finished set NFTs when users list them on Starknet marketplaces. In short, “Briq tokenomics” describes the in‑app economics of these ERC‑1155 and ERC‑721 items rather than a separate currency. (dappland.com)

    What you can do with briqs

    • Mint and trade: Build a set, mint it, and list it as a unique NFT. Later, you can reclaim briqs to build again. (starknet.io)
    • Collect themed drops: Boxes and booklets add scarcity, lore, and structure to collections. (github.com)
    • Experiment across “Briq DeFi, NFTs, gaming”: Some Starknet projects have used Briq assets for creative drops tied to finance or games, blending playful NFTs with the wider ecosystem. (medium.com)

    Ecosystem & Use Cases

    Briq’s core audience includes creators, collectors, and game designers who want reusable parts and verifiable, on‑chain builds. The project regularly appears in community campaigns, art collabs, and Starknet showcases. (starknet.io)

    • Community quests: Briq co‑hosted the “Hi, Starks!” on‑chain campaign with other Starknet projects, encouraging users to complete tasks and collect NFTs. (docs.element.market)
    • DeFi x NFTs x gaming: A three‑way collaboration between zkLend (a money market), Ducks Everywhere, and Briq highlighted how composable NFTs can interact with broader finance‑and‑fun themes on Starknet. (medium.com)
    • Creator tooling: The builder dapp uses a 3D interface so even first‑timers can place blocks, save drafts, and mint sets on chain. (github.com)

    Because Starknet has multiple wallets and NFT marketplaces, Briq sets and briq materials can circulate through galleries and secondary markets, supporting both building and collecting. Dappland also links to a Starknet marketplace where the “Briq Sets” collection is viewable. (dappland.com)

    Advantages & Challenges

    Advantages

    • True composability: You can always break a set and reuse the same briqs, so experimentation has a low cost. (starknet.io)
    • Fast, low‑fee UX: Building on the L2 keeps minting and edits affordable for regular users. (starknet.io)
    • Clear contract architecture: Separate contracts for briqs, sets, boxes, and booklets make the system easy to reason about and extend. (github.com)

    Challenges

    • New mental model: Because briqs are materials and sets are containers, newcomers may need a bit of time to learn how assembly and disassembly work. (Even fans note the learning curve is part of the fun.)
    • L2 onboarding: New users still need a Starknet wallet, and some will bridge funds from Ethereum before interacting with the dapp. Wallet teams like Argent and Braavos keep improving this flow. (support.argent.xyz)
    • Name confusion: Other companies and projects called “Briq” exist but are unrelated; this can confuse research for people who are new to the protocol. (briq.com)

    Where to Buy & Wallets

    If you’re wondering where to buy BRIQ: the Briq protocol does not have a separate fungible “BRIQ token” listed on exchanges, so there isn’t a BRIQ price chart to follow today. Instead, you acquire briqs (materials), boxes, booklets, or finished set NFTs directly on Starknet through the Briq builder or via Starknet NFT marketplaces. The official Starknet directory page for Briq also notes “Has a token? Not yet.” (dappland.com)

    Wallets that work well

    • Argent X: A Starknet browser wallet supported by Argent, with guides for setup and usage. (support.argent.xyz)
    • Braavos: A smart‑contract wallet available on mobile and desktop browsers, with a built‑in dapp gallery for Starknet apps. (chromewebstore.google.com)

    A typical flow looks like this: install a Starknet wallet, fund it, open the builder at briq.construction, and start building. From there you can mint a set NFT, buy themed boxes, or browse secondary listings for sets and briqs through Starknet marketplaces linked from ecosystem pages. (github.com)

    Regulatory & Compliance

    Briq assets are NFTs representing digital collectibles built from on‑chain materials. They are not marketed as financial instruments, and the project does not publish a separate fungible BRIQ token. As a result, many people view “Briq regulatory status” through the same lens used for other art and collectible NFTs: treatment can vary by jurisdiction, and marketplaces often apply their own listing standards.

    Briq halal and shariah compliance

    Is Briq halal? There is no public statement or certification from the Briq team or official ecosystem pages that declares the protocol or a “BRIQ token” as halal or shariah certified. In other words, “BRIQ shariah compliant” status is not explicitly established in public materials reviewed as of October 5, 2025. This conclusion is based on checking the official site and ecosystem listings, which describe Briq as an NFT building protocol without referencing halal certification. (Inference from official pages.) (starknet.io)

    Jurisdictional notes

    Because Briq centers on NFTs and creative tooling, user onboarding usually involves standard Web3 steps (wallet setup, marketplace terms, and jurisdictional rules of the platform you use). Wallets like Argent X and Braavos publish their own documentation and compliance practices for users. (support.argent.xyz)

    Future Outlook

    Briq’s roadmap is closely tied to the growth of Starknet and the broader “on‑chain worlds” movement. The founders are active in Starknet governance and the on‑chain gaming scene, which helps keep Briq aligned with network upgrades and creator needs. As Starknet scales and rolls out more user‑friendly features, building and remixing NFTs should get even easier. (starknet.io)

    In the near term, expect more themed drops, cross‑project collaborations, and events that blend “Briq DeFi, NFTs, gaming” into fun campaigns—similar to the zkLend x Ducks Everywhere x Briq collab and community quests like “Hi, Starks!” Longer‑term, improved L2 tooling and wallet UX can reduce friction so more players, artists, and game studios treat briqs as standard parts in their projects. (medium.com)

    Summary

    Briq is a creative protocol on Starknet where NFTs are built from reusable on‑chain blocks. The system’s smart‑contract design—briqs as ERC‑1155 materials, sets as ERC‑721 creations, plus boxes and booklets—lets anyone build, mint, dismantle, and rebuild without losing their parts. There is no separate BRIQ token or BRIQ price today; instead, value flows through the briqs and set NFTs themselves. With engaged founders, visible community activity, and a home on a fast L2, Briq offers a clear, educational example of how composability can power digital art, collectibles, and games on the Briq blockchain stack. (github.com)

    Last Updated: 10/5/2025 15:22 UTC

    Description

    #0

    Briq is an innovative NFT crafting and composability system that uses basic elements called briqs to create more complex NFT structures or sets. Users can mint, assemble, and modify their briqs on the Briq platform, turning them into customizable NFTs.

    Sector: NFT
    Blockchain: Other L2

    Market Data

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    0 0.00% (7d)
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    0
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    Exchange Relationships

    COMPACT
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    No relationships known yet.

    Important Milestones

    Sep 2, 2025
    Starknet outage impacts briq
    Security Incident
    After Starknet’s 0.14.0 upgrade, block production halted for hours, causing downtime for dapps like briq until reorgs restored normal operation.
    Oct 27, 2023
    Hi, Starks! campaign
    Partnership
    Briq co-hosted Element’s on-chain quest with Starknet ID and Layerswap; participants completed tasks to earn gem NFTs and a Stark’s Crown reward.
    Feb 27, 2023
    Mainnet contracts listed
    Launch
    Briq repository updated to include current Starknet mainnet addresses for briqs, sets, boxes, and booklets, confirming live deployment of core protocol.
    Feb 23, 2023
    Triple collab announced
    Partnership
    zkLend, Ducks Everywhere, and briq launched a first-of-its-kind Starknet collaboration, delivering briq-built ZENDucks and community rewards to celebrate ecosystem pioneers.
    Feb 15, 2023
    Ducks auctions sellout
    Partnership
    All 200 briq-built DucksEverywhere NFTs were minted and auctioned to collectors, marking the first independent briq collection sold out on Starknet.
    Jan 27, 2023
    Starknet ID integration
    Upgrade
    Briq 2.0.4 introduced Starknet ID support and direct set-image downloads, improving identity features and asset sharing across Starknet marketplaces.
    Dec 14, 2022
    Builders’ Council formed
    Governance
    Briq co‑founder Sylve Chevet introduced Starknet’s Builders’ Council and joined as governance facilitator to help steward early protocol decisions and votes.
    Jun 9, 2022
    Boxes and booklets
    Upgrade
    Protocol refactor added ERC‑1155 boxes and booklets alongside sets and briqs, formalizing drops and instruction assets used for building themed creations.