Distribution of Muse staking reward
A few weeks ago we announced the start of single $MUSE staking to earn $MUSE bought back using the NFT20 protocol fees. We decided to migrate to a new staking contract that offers more flexibility and safety based on the xSushi smart contract:The new contract issues Staked Muse (sMUSE), an ERC20 that offers a new range of use cases for the $Muse ecosystem.The first contract had an arithmetic error spotted by Bailey T that could have locked forever some $Muse on the contract in the long term a...
2 years anniversary community update
It’s been 2 years since the launch of the Very Nifty game that lead to the creation of the Muse DAO: An NFT venture builder owned by the community. In this article, we’ll take the time to write about some of our past releases and see where we are going. For the lookback, our past releases fit in the NFT universe and will be listed in several categories: Trading, Gaming, Tools, and experiments.NFT TradingNFT20 is our flagship product. The first NFT exchange that enabled trading tokenized floor...
NFT20 & MUSE Community Update
The Tao of Pooh the BearIt’s been a while since the last community update, in part because we’ve been growing and working on so many things that we didn’t have time to write one, but time is due.CommunityAfter 9 months of daily product iteration and investing time in the community, we are really happy with the state of things and enjoy more than ever the every day of coming to discord and discussing ideas, laughing with, and getting mad at anon pepes, a dream come true.We also see a consisten...
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Distribution of Muse staking reward
A few weeks ago we announced the start of single $MUSE staking to earn $MUSE bought back using the NFT20 protocol fees. We decided to migrate to a new staking contract that offers more flexibility and safety based on the xSushi smart contract:The new contract issues Staked Muse (sMUSE), an ERC20 that offers a new range of use cases for the $Muse ecosystem.The first contract had an arithmetic error spotted by Bailey T that could have locked forever some $Muse on the contract in the long term a...
2 years anniversary community update
It’s been 2 years since the launch of the Very Nifty game that lead to the creation of the Muse DAO: An NFT venture builder owned by the community. In this article, we’ll take the time to write about some of our past releases and see where we are going. For the lookback, our past releases fit in the NFT universe and will be listed in several categories: Trading, Gaming, Tools, and experiments.NFT TradingNFT20 is our flagship product. The first NFT exchange that enabled trading tokenized floor...
NFT20 & MUSE Community Update
The Tao of Pooh the BearIt’s been a while since the last community update, in part because we’ve been growing and working on so many things that we didn’t have time to write one, but time is due.CommunityAfter 9 months of daily product iteration and investing time in the community, we are really happy with the state of things and enjoy more than ever the every day of coming to discord and discussing ideas, laughing with, and getting mad at anon pepes, a dream come true.We also see a consisten...
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This is a small write up about some of the stuff that happens in the backstage when creating a Ethereum application. It’s been two months we’re creating a blockchain game with some DeFi components called Very Nifty. The goal is to give life to NFTs in a simple yet fun tamagotchi like game.
DeFi might bank the unbanked in few years but it is definitely trolling the untrolled already.
TLDR: We didn’t do any presale/premint and have no “free magical internet money” to give to all blood suckers; so no need to contact us :)
We already wrote a similar essay describing the behind the scene of Very Nifty a few weeks ago that might be a good introduction to understand our mindset:
Since this last article our shipping rate didn’t decrease, same as our sleeping rate didn’t increase. The only things that have been increasing are the metrics we are watching:
Natural liquidity provided by people who likes the project without giving away fake APY for monkeys.
Player base
Burn rate of our in game token (cause people actually play)
So basically, when you reach a 700K$ in volume a day in Uniswap trading on your token not marketed (or less if you did premint/presale and weird partnerhips), you get listed on CoinGecko and CoinMarket Cap. The word spread fast and many moonboys join the fun. Then you get 100 messages a day offering a wide range of services: Get listed on exchanges for xK$, do an AMA on a pump and dumper telegram group, community managers who never read anything about your project that suddenly apply saying they are the biggest fan…
All of this get cleared so fast with polite answers or basic trolling..
But Monday evening someone actually had an interesting service to offer to us. He could DDOS our website, his demo made the website unavailable for few minutes.. This happened at the worst time as we were focusing on development as usual and about to go on a livechat with a telegram community to explain our game mechanics. Those kind of events make your brain disturbed to focus on the 100 other things you are already trying to do running development, community, token economics...
The attack was a DDOS focused on our frontend, smart contracts and funds were safu, it was just about disabling the website to be accessed by other players and asking money to restore it. While we tried to do our best with money on blockchain we didn’t have time to do basic security on the server that is used by the players to access the game… So it was so easy for him. As soon as the person attacked the server, he contacted us through telegram to discuss how we can pay him to fix the “issues” and we created a chat with us two and him:
After receiving his email with proposal of fixing the “critical issue” for 4k$ and being already drown in things to do we decided to basically win time. We’re just two devs with no funding so we had to innovate:
This conversation led us to know that this attacker had no idea about our project and might just scan all recent listing from popular crypto websites to find simple prey to attack. We went a little further and even asked him to prepare a resume when our fictional manager would be available the next day:
We spent the next hours doing the basics for hardening the server to handle any attacks. And the next day he contacted again. I asked for a demo and he managed to put our frontend down again..
As the logic of the game lives on the blockchain, we don’t really care about this kind of show off because we could host the frontend anywhere else in few minutes and the contract interaction would always be possible from Etherscan or other platforms in case of emergency:
So it was time to pull the rug on him.. And tell him that everything about the project manager and office was a joke:
For a short instant, everything he thought to be true melted in front of him. Did he really thought Cathy wanted to see his resume? Our high level management was chilling in SF offices?
That’s how you rug pull the troller as we suppose this person has some cost runing his DDOS attack and just saw his magical internet money disappear..
We’ll publish really soon a frontend version on different websites like Github/Surge to make sure any risk is completely removed from DDOS attack..
This ecosystem is evolving so fast, if you’re looking to get some value out of it, don’t lose your time threatening people or ask for something... Just use your skills in a community to make it evolve without waiting for something back..
You’ll be rewarded!
This is a small write up about some of the stuff that happens in the backstage when creating a Ethereum application. It’s been two months we’re creating a blockchain game with some DeFi components called Very Nifty. The goal is to give life to NFTs in a simple yet fun tamagotchi like game.
DeFi might bank the unbanked in few years but it is definitely trolling the untrolled already.
TLDR: We didn’t do any presale/premint and have no “free magical internet money” to give to all blood suckers; so no need to contact us :)
We already wrote a similar essay describing the behind the scene of Very Nifty a few weeks ago that might be a good introduction to understand our mindset:
Since this last article our shipping rate didn’t decrease, same as our sleeping rate didn’t increase. The only things that have been increasing are the metrics we are watching:
Natural liquidity provided by people who likes the project without giving away fake APY for monkeys.
Player base
Burn rate of our in game token (cause people actually play)
So basically, when you reach a 700K$ in volume a day in Uniswap trading on your token not marketed (or less if you did premint/presale and weird partnerhips), you get listed on CoinGecko and CoinMarket Cap. The word spread fast and many moonboys join the fun. Then you get 100 messages a day offering a wide range of services: Get listed on exchanges for xK$, do an AMA on a pump and dumper telegram group, community managers who never read anything about your project that suddenly apply saying they are the biggest fan…
All of this get cleared so fast with polite answers or basic trolling..
But Monday evening someone actually had an interesting service to offer to us. He could DDOS our website, his demo made the website unavailable for few minutes.. This happened at the worst time as we were focusing on development as usual and about to go on a livechat with a telegram community to explain our game mechanics. Those kind of events make your brain disturbed to focus on the 100 other things you are already trying to do running development, community, token economics...
The attack was a DDOS focused on our frontend, smart contracts and funds were safu, it was just about disabling the website to be accessed by other players and asking money to restore it. While we tried to do our best with money on blockchain we didn’t have time to do basic security on the server that is used by the players to access the game… So it was so easy for him. As soon as the person attacked the server, he contacted us through telegram to discuss how we can pay him to fix the “issues” and we created a chat with us two and him:
After receiving his email with proposal of fixing the “critical issue” for 4k$ and being already drown in things to do we decided to basically win time. We’re just two devs with no funding so we had to innovate:
This conversation led us to know that this attacker had no idea about our project and might just scan all recent listing from popular crypto websites to find simple prey to attack. We went a little further and even asked him to prepare a resume when our fictional manager would be available the next day:
We spent the next hours doing the basics for hardening the server to handle any attacks. And the next day he contacted again. I asked for a demo and he managed to put our frontend down again..
As the logic of the game lives on the blockchain, we don’t really care about this kind of show off because we could host the frontend anywhere else in few minutes and the contract interaction would always be possible from Etherscan or other platforms in case of emergency:
So it was time to pull the rug on him.. And tell him that everything about the project manager and office was a joke:
For a short instant, everything he thought to be true melted in front of him. Did he really thought Cathy wanted to see his resume? Our high level management was chilling in SF offices?
That’s how you rug pull the troller as we suppose this person has some cost runing his DDOS attack and just saw his magical internet money disappear..
We’ll publish really soon a frontend version on different websites like Github/Surge to make sure any risk is completely removed from DDOS attack..
This ecosystem is evolving so fast, if you’re looking to get some value out of it, don’t lose your time threatening people or ask for something... Just use your skills in a community to make it evolve without waiting for something back..
You’ll be rewarded!
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