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Author Topic: Trying to Understand the Sustainability of Ryuki8’s Capped NFT Yield Model  (Read 6 times)
RYUKI8 (OP)
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Today at 04:06:55 PM
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Hey everyone,

I’ve seen Ryuki8 mentioned a few times recently, so I decided to dig a bit deeper and put together a clearer overview, since the information feels somewhat fragmented depending on where you look.

From what I understand, Ryuki8 isn’t positioned as a single token or short-term product, but rather as a broader Web3 ecosystem. The structure connects NFTs, yield generation, education and infrastructure under predefined rules and limits. One thing that stood out to me is that returns are capped at the NFT level instead of being open-ended, which seems like an intentional design choice to control risk and sustainability.

Access to the ecosystem happens through NFTs called Kihon, which are divided into different tiers. Each tier defines earning limits, participation depth and which parts of the ecosystem you can access. Earnings don’t come from just one source either. They are combined from network commissions, ecosystem activity, mining-related revenue and education or internal royalties, all counting toward the same cap.

Another point worth mentioning is how returns are supposed to be funded. According to their materials, yields are tied to actual internal activity like trading operations, swaps, bridges, mining and education sales. In theory, that means rewards depend on real execution inside the ecosystem rather than unlimited inflows of new users.

Overall, Ryuki8 seems to put a lot of emphasis on structure. Fixed rules, transparent mechanics, early positioning benefits and long-term participation instead of pure short-term speculation. On paper, that’s different from many NFT yield models we’ve seen before, but of course execution matters a lot.

This isn’t financial advice, just an attempt to summarize and understand the model more clearly. If anyone here has tested the DApp, gone through the documentation in detail, or noticed specific strengths or risks, I’d be interested in hearing your take.
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