AzukiDAO proposes to recover 20000 ETH from Azuki founder Zagabond https://ift.tt/6mJP9te

Members of the DAO claim to be made of a dedicated group of Azuki enthusiasts. It's the latest wrinkle following the launch of the controversial "Elementals" collection.

A new decentralized autonomous organization purportedly made up of a “dedicated group of Azuki enthusiasts,” has launched a proposal to claw back 20,000 Ether (ETH) from Zagabond, the founder of the blue-chip non-fungible token (NFT) brand Azuki. 

The proposal, initiated on July 2, outlines hiring a lawyer to take legal action against Zagabond, real name Alex Xu, for allegedly “rugging” multiple projects. The clawback seeks $39 million worth of ETH earned from the launch of Azuki’s controversial “Elementals” collection. It proposes to allocate any funds retrieved back to the DAO to “promote the growth of the entire Azuki community.”

The AzukiDAO proposal seeks to claw back $39 million from Zagabond. Source: Snapshot.org

At the time of publication, 88.11% of the DAO’s Bean tokens have been used to vote in favor of the action, while 11.9% have voted against it. The proposal is scheduled to end at 6:38 am UTC on July 3.

Who is AzukiDAO?

However, while AzukiDAO claims to be made up of “OG Azuki holders,” some have questioned the origins of the DAO and its relationship to members of the Azuki project.

In a July 3 Twitter thread, pseudonymous commentator @tytan.eth informed his 19,000 followers that most Azuki holders had never heard of the AzukiDAO and assumed it was “either fake or a group with malicious intent.”

Meanwhile, data from Etherscan shows the contract for the “Bean” token being used to vote on the proposal was minted just two days ago, while the associated Twitter page was created only in June 2023 and its Discord channel shows only 116 members.

Cointelegraph contacted Azuki, Zagabond and AzukiDAO for comment but did not receive an immediate response.

Elementals controversy explained

Holders of Azuki NFTs and pundits from the broader NFT community have levied a good deal of criticism at the Azuki team ever since the controversial launch of its “Azuki Elementals” collection on June 27.

The “Elementals” project was first hinted at during an Azuki-branded event hosted in Las Vegas on June 23. A small allocation of the 20,000 NFTs was airdropped to select Azuki holders.

The remaining NFTs became available for purchase at 4 pm on June 27. Existing holders of Azuki NFTs and holders of “BEANZ” — another derivative project — were given a 20-minute pre-sale window.

Related: Yes, the Secret Service has an NFT collection, and no, it’s not for sale

The sale never went public, as the entire collection was snapped up in private sales in under 15 minutes. Overall, the launch earned the Azuki team a total of $38 million.

The Azuki Elementals collection. Source: OpenSea

This drew widespread backlash, with grievances ranging from the small pre-sale window, to mint failures from an overloaded website, and the lack of originality in the new NFTs art.

NFT holders also expressed their concern that releasing 20,000 new NFTs would dilute the value of pre-existing NFTs in the collection. The controversy reached its peak when the project team reportedly transferred 20,000 ETH from the wallet soon after the collection was minted out.

Magazine: 4 out of 10 NFT sales are fake: Learn to spot the signs of wash trading



from Cointelegraph.com News Tom Mitchelhill

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