Every Fan Has a Favorite. Now Your Ticket Does Too.
When you go to a multi-band show, you're usually there for one band. Maybe two. You RSVP'd to that six-band Saturday at Yotsuya Outbreak because Yeti Valhalla is on the lineup, and the other five are gravy. But your ticket doesn't know that. It's just a ticket.

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Every Fan Has a Favorite. Now Your Ticket Does Too.
When you go to a multi-band show, you're usually there for one band. Maybe two. You RSVP'd to that six-band Saturday at Yotsuya Outbreak because Yeti Valhalla is on the lineup, and the other five are gravy. But your ticket doesn't know that. It's just a ticket.
Until now.

Today we're rolling out Artist X Design — the next evolution of Bandruption's collectible ticketing. After you RSVP, you pick which artist on the lineup you're there to see, then choose a design built around that artist's branding and aesthetic. It's still your ticket to the whole show, but scoped to your actual fandom.
First, a Lineup That's Actually a Lineup
Before we get to the ticket flow, there's a smaller but related change worth calling out. Event pages on Bandruption now treat every artist on the bill as a first-class citizen. The Lineup section links straight through to each artist's profile — not just the host band, not just the headliner. Every act.

That sounds obvious, but most ticketing platforms don't do it. The support acts usually get a name in text, maybe a logo if you're lucky, and that's it. On Bandruption, tapping any band in the lineup takes you to their full profile — their bio, their other shows, their merch, their affiliate storefront. If you've never heard of Slum Rose but they're opening for Yeti Valhalla, you can click through and check them out before the show. By the time you walk into the venue, you might already be a fan.
This is the groundwork that makes Artist X Design actually meaningful. If the platform is going to ask you which artist you're there to see, every artist on the bill has to be a real thing you can engage with — not just a name in a list.
How It Works
If you've read our earlier post on ticketing that fans actually want to share, you already know every event on Bandruption generates a set of unique collectible designs from the organizer's source art. Artist X Design extends that one level deeper: now every artist on the lineup gets their own set of designs.
1. RSVP to the show
Nothing new here. Tap RSVP, pay-at-door or check out online, and your ticket lands in your collection. The event's default design is already loaded — you're good to go if you stop here.

2. Pick the artist you're attending to see
Open the ticket and hit Share to Social Media. At the top of the modal, you'll see a new Attending to See section listing every artist on the lineup. Tap the one you came for.

3. Pick your design
Each artist gets four unique designs generated from their own visual identity — plus the event default, in case you want to keep it neutral. Each one is a different mood built around the same artist: different color palette, different composition, same band front and center.



Pick the one that matches your taste. That's your ticket now.
Share It Like You Mean It
Once you've locked in your artist and design, the share flow works exactly like it does for any other Bandruption ticket. Instagram, Twitter/X, Facebook, LinkedIn — each gets a properly sized preview with the event details, the artist you're there to see, your username, and a scannable QR code linking back to the event.

Drop it in your stories. Post it to your feed. Text it to a friend. Every share is organic promotion for the show, with the extra hook of your favorite band on the lineup front and center. Fans of one artist pull in fans of the others — and you look cool doing it.
Why This Matters
For fans, it's a sharper flex. Posting a ticket to a six-band show is cool. Posting a ticket that specifically calls out the band you came for is a vibe. It's the difference between "I'm going to this festival" and "I'm going to see Creep Down."
For artists, it's signal. When fans pick your branding as their Artist X Design, you know exactly who is showing up for you — not just the headliner, not just the venue. That data flows straight into the artist dashboard.
For organizers, it's free distributed marketing. A six-band bill used to mean one event poster. Now it's dozens of fan-authored variations hitting social feeds in the days leading up to the show, each one algorithmically optimized by the person who knows their own audience best: the fan.
Proof of Attendance, Per Artist
Here's the part that makes it permanent. When you get scanned in at the door, your Artist X Design locks in as a Proof of Attendance collectible on your profile — tied to the artist you chose, not just the event.

Over time, your profile stops being a vague list of shows and starts telling a precise story. Not "I've been to 47 gigs" but "I've seen Yeti Valhalla live four times, Creep Down twice, and caught The Roses of All Flowers at that one weird Shinjuku basement show in November." That's a real concert history. That's Proof of Music Fandom at the resolution it should live at.
For the artist looking at their own analytics, it's the same story in reverse: a verifiable list of the fans who walked through the door specifically for them. That's the foundation everything else on Bandruption — affiliate storefronts, fan club tiers, superfan perks — is built on.
Live Now
Artist X Design is live on every multi-artist event on Bandruption. If you've already RSVP'd to an upcoming show, open your ticket and try it now. If you haven't, there are plenty of shows coming up — find one and grab a spot.
Artists and organizers: every lineup you publish now automatically generates designs per artist. No extra setup on your end — it's already running.
Let's save live music. One band at a time.
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