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Lana Rhoades

The worst influencer and celebrity NFT cash grabs of 2022

From Donald Trump’s trading cards to Tai Lopez’s peculiar NFT collection, 2022 marked another year of poorly thought-out NFT drops by big names.

Mainstream hype for the nonfungible token (NFT) market cooled down significantly in 2022, but that didn’t stop a host of popular and wealthy figures from stinking up the space with dreadful collections last year.

In the 2022 edition of the worst influencer and celebrity NFT cash grabs, Cointelegraph takes a look at four projects seemingly designed to milk capital out of their fans pockets, while delivering very little.

Tai Lopez — OG (Original Garage) Social Club

First on the list is the oddball entrepreneur Tai Lopez, best known for his cheesy marketing campaigns that used to plague YouTube not so long ago.

Lopez’s most famous video is his “here in my garage” business course promo from 2015 where he first shows off his Lambo before switching gears and noting that he is more proud of the thousands of books he owns because of the “knowledge” they give him.

Paying homage to the video, Lopez launched a collection dubbed the “OG (Original Garage) Social Club” in March.

The NFTs came in three tiers of rarity, going from anywhere between $150 on the lower end to $50,000 for the premium tokens that offered exclusive benefits such as a one-on-one basketball game with Lopez, watching a movie, or eating dinner together and private mentorship sessions.

The current data on OpenSea now paints a grim picture however, with the floor price for all the NFTs regardless of rarity, sitting at 0.08 Ether (ETH) or $97 at the time of writing.

Looking at the premium NFTs, the basketball-related token is on sale for as low as 0.880 ETH ($1069), while an NFT granting access to a one-on-one dinner with Lopez is now on sale for 1 ETH ($1214) despite first being sold for around $30,000.

Donald Trump — Trump Digital Trading Cards

Despite historically being a vocal crypto-hater, former president Donald Trump announced a strange licensed NFT project in December that consisted of 45,000 self-themed trading cards.

The shoddy and potentially plagiarized artwork of the NFTs depicted Trump in various forms such as a superhero, hunter, cowboy and golfer. The NFTs offered buyers a chance to win a host of one-on-one experiences with the 45th president via sweepstakes.

Trump Digital Trading Card NFTs: OpenSea

The NFTs initially sold for $99 apiece quickly selling out on Dec. 16 with the floor price rapidly rising to 0.83 ETH ($1,008) on OpenSea within two days. Since then, however, the price has significantly tanked to 0.164 ETH ($199).

While people who first bought in are likely to still be in the green, the Trump NFT project is good either way as it pocketed around $4.5 million from the initial sales, with an ongoing 10% creator fee also coming back to it via sales on secondary markets.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. — Mayweverse

Boxing icon Floyd Mayweather Jr. also makes the 2022 list for an NFT project that seems to have been completely abandoned at the time of writing.

Tweeting on Mar. 22, Mayweather announced the “Mayweverse” consisting of 5,000 NFT collectibles.

“If you are in the NFT world and you’re betting on me, you will never lose,” he said.

The NFTs initially went for a mint price of roughly $900 on Apr. 13 offering hodlers the chance to win cash prizes ranging from $5,000 to $30,000 and exclusive experiences such as joining Mayweather in an upcoming Metaverse called “Floyd’s Gym.”

Since the mint, the Mayweverse Twitter account has remained dormant with not a single follow-up tweet throughout 2022. It’s unclear if anyone received prizes or when the Metaverse will be shipped.

The website’s roadmap also remains undated despite initially stating other “future benefits” would be announced soon.

Click “Collect” below the illustration at the top of the page or follow this link.

OpenSea data also makes it hard to ascertain what is happening with the project.

One Maywevere collection listed on the marketplace contains 73 tokens that are not for sale with no price history. Another contains five NFTs which all last sold for less 0.050 Wrapped ETH ($60) but have a floor price of 0.1 ETH ($121).

Mayweverse NFTs: OpenSea

Lana Rhoades — CryptoSis.

Last on the list is the popular influencer and former adult film star Lana Rhoades launched the now-abandoned Crypto Sis NFT project in February 2022.

Crypto Sis consists of 6,069 Rhoades-themed cartoon avatar NFTs with the number initially meant to be 6,969 which it didn’t reach due to a lack of demand.

Crypto Sis NFTs: OpenSea

The NFTs went for a mint price of roughly $261 but the value now essentially sits at $0 on OpenSea as there has been less than 1 ETH worth of total trading activity since its Feb. 2022 launch. The project’s Twitter page is also currently suspended.

Rhoades reportedly pocketed $1.5 million from the sales, then promptly withdrew the funds from her Ethereum wallet before walking away from the project altogether stating her community was too negative.

Related: Crypto adoption in 2022: What events moved the industry forward?

In now-deleted social media posts, Rhoades initially touted the avatars would be usable in the Metaverse along with offering a host of utilities such as whitelist access to future drops, inclusion into a Metaverse community, signed merch and virtual meet and greets.

Rhoades claimed she was working hard to make the project a “lucrative investment for holders that they can sell for more than they paid to mint.”

Deleted Crypto Sis posts: Instagram

However, none of that has come to fruition, leading to people in the community to accuse her of operating a rug pull. Rhoades counter-argued the project flopped and there was nothing she could do to fix it.

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Nifty News: Collector spends $488K minting Tubby Cats, NFT vending machine

The floor price of Lana Rhoades NFT project has dropped 96.1% while a 24/7 Solana NFT vending machine was officially launched in New York this week.

An anonymous nonfungible token (NFT) collector spent 204 Ether (ETH) worth roughly $488,800 (at the time of writing, considerably more when it occurred) on gas fees to mint 1,000 Tubby Cats NFTs.

In total, the Tubby Cats enthusiast clearly had some capital to burn as they spent more than $720,000 on minting the NFTs including gas fees, according to the Etherscan transaction history.

Following the mint of 1000 NFTs, and with Tubby Cats invading Nifty Twitter timelines, it appears that the community has turned the occurrence into a meme, as various figures have claimed to be Tubby Cat whales in jest.

The project consists of 20,000 NFTs depicting unique computer-generated cat avatars. According to data from NFT marketplace OpenSea, Tubby Cats NFTs have generated 11,600 Ether ($27.7 million) worth of trading volume in just three days since listing on the platform.

Blockchain-based fantasy basketball game receives major backing

Web3 gaming startup Fast Break Labs has closed a $6 million seed funding round to launch an NFT-based fantasy basketball game dubbed the “Virtual Basketball Association” (VBA)

According to a Feb. 23 announcement, the seed round was co-led by Patron and Pantera Capital and included backing from a long list of top names such as Solana Ventures, Blue Pool Capital (the family office of Brooklyn Nets owner Joe Tsai), Riot Games co-founder Marc Merill and Sacramento Kings Co-Owner Aneel Ranadive, to name a few.

The game is slated to launch via an early alpha for 2,000 users, who will have a chance to collect fictional player NFTs and build teams for season 0. Users will be able to earn rewards from the game via player vs player simulated team battles.

The VBA: Fast Break Labs

"While we're primarily focused on creating a new and fun experience, it was also really important to us to give power back to gamers by allowing them to shape the direction of the game and accrue the economic benefits," said Charles Du, the CEO and co-founder of Fast Break Labs.

Solana NFT vending machine runs 24/7 in New York

Solana-based NFT marketplace Neon unveiled a 24/7 NFT vending machine in New York’s financial district on Feb. 23.

The vending machine was soft-launched back in December but is now officially rolled out and accepts credit and debit card payments. After payment, it dispenses a box containing a unique code that can be used to redeem an NFT listed on the platform.

Solana NFT vending machine: Neon

The firm stated that the vending machine was designed to provide the “simplest, most accessible way to buy, sell and trade NFTs in the real world.”

Speaking as part of the announcement, CMO and co-founder of Neon Jordan Birnholtz emphasized the importance of providing a user-friendly buying experience as a way to remove a barrier to crypto:

“Giving people the choice to use vending machines and an easy online platform that decouples cryptocurrency from NFT participation means we can engage the widest possible audience.”

“NFT buying and selling doesn’t need to be a mystery and you shouldn’t be required to hold Ethereum, write a smart contract, pay gas costs or bridge blockchains to participate,” he added.

Another influencer NFT project crashes and burns

The floor price of NFTs from the project founded by popular influencer and pornstar Lana Rhoades has crashed an eye-watering 96.1%.

Rhoades’ CryptoSis NFT collection consists of 6,969 tokens that feature cartoon style depictions of the influencer. The cost to mint plus gas fees totaled 0.18 Ether worth roughly $421, however, the floor price has since crashed to 0.007 Ether ($16) on OpenSea.

The community appears to be unhappy with Rhoades and team behind the project, as Twitter user “Zachxbt” highlighted on Twitter earlier this month that:

“Another dead influencer project. No activity from the team in weeks, roadmap untouched, majority of the funds raised transferred to Coinbase/Gemini.”

The project is said to have raised around $1.8 million in profit, and some have questioned why Rhoades deleted their promotional Tik Tok videos about the project since it has gone cold.

Other Nifty News

New data shows that transfers of NFTs on Ethereum have surpassed transfers of stablecoins and altcoins while the supply of wrapped Bitcoin (WBTC) has remained relatively stagnant since late last year.

Puma joined the growing list of major brands to purchase a decentralized URL and reveal their NFT plans by changing their Twitter handle to Puma.eth on Feb. 22. The German sportswear brand registered the domain name with the Ethereum Name Service.

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