The first wave of airdrop information for December has arrived. Although the points ranking has not been officially announced yet, the project itself is worth researching first.
The project called RAYLS has just completed a $25 million financing, scheduled to launch on December 1 (specific time to be officially announced). The participation threshold is not low, requiring a score of 231 to 241 to qualify. Based on current calculations, it is estimated that one could receive a return of approximately $25 to $55. The distribution mechanism is based on a points system, but the details are still under confidentiality.
From a technical perspective, Rayls builds an EVM-compatible blockchain ecosystem - the highlight is that it integrates several typically contradictory features such as enterprise-level privacy protection, scalability, cross-chain interoperability, and decentralization. Financial institutions can use it for asset tokenization, whether for securities or physical assets, all of which can be put on-chain. Scenarios such as central bank digital currency payments, cross-border settlements, and inter-institutional clearing can all be operational.
Its hybrid architecture design is quite interesting: banks can deploy private subnets to handle sensitive operations, conduct privacy transactions through a central hub, and at the same time connect to public blockchain networks for global distribution. This layered design meets regulatory compliance requirements while retaining the openness of blockchain.
Let's talk about the token design of RLS. It follows a deflationary path—total supply is capped and can only decrease, which inherently creates scarcity. With no pressure for inflation, holders of the token are more closely tied to the interests of network development, making it particularly suitable for financial institutions that pursue stable expectations. In terms of supply structure, the total supply is locked at 10 billion tokens, with 1.5 billion tokens released at TGE.
This configuration is considered a relatively stable arrangement in institutional-level projects. If you want to participate in the Airdrop, now is the time to start accumulating points. The opportunity is here; whether you can reap the benefits depends on your execution.
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RunWhenCut
· 47m ago
Starting from 231 points, this threshold has discouraged quite a few people, but since it is an institutional-level project, I still have to follow it.
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SatoshiSherpa
· 5h ago
231 to 241 points? How long will it take to accumulate enough? It feels like one of those thresholds that looks simple but is actually difficult to reach.
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UncleLiquidation
· 5h ago
Is 231 points enough? That's a bit greedy, the threshold is set quite high.
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MysteryBoxOpener
· 5h ago
The threshold of 231 points is indeed a bit harsh, but the deflationary mechanism looks pretty good.
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Deconstructionist
· 5h ago
Wait, do I need to have between 231 and 241 points to redeem? I only have a little over 180 points right now, it feels a bit precarious.
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RektButStillHere
· 5h ago
231 to 241 points? Wow, this threshold is a bit harsh, ordinary retail investors can't possibly achieve it, right?
The first wave of airdrop information for December has arrived. Although the points ranking has not been officially announced yet, the project itself is worth researching first.
The project called RAYLS has just completed a $25 million financing, scheduled to launch on December 1 (specific time to be officially announced). The participation threshold is not low, requiring a score of 231 to 241 to qualify. Based on current calculations, it is estimated that one could receive a return of approximately $25 to $55. The distribution mechanism is based on a points system, but the details are still under confidentiality.
From a technical perspective, Rayls builds an EVM-compatible blockchain ecosystem - the highlight is that it integrates several typically contradictory features such as enterprise-level privacy protection, scalability, cross-chain interoperability, and decentralization. Financial institutions can use it for asset tokenization, whether for securities or physical assets, all of which can be put on-chain. Scenarios such as central bank digital currency payments, cross-border settlements, and inter-institutional clearing can all be operational.
Its hybrid architecture design is quite interesting: banks can deploy private subnets to handle sensitive operations, conduct privacy transactions through a central hub, and at the same time connect to public blockchain networks for global distribution. This layered design meets regulatory compliance requirements while retaining the openness of blockchain.
Let's talk about the token design of RLS. It follows a deflationary path—total supply is capped and can only decrease, which inherently creates scarcity. With no pressure for inflation, holders of the token are more closely tied to the interests of network development, making it particularly suitable for financial institutions that pursue stable expectations. In terms of supply structure, the total supply is locked at 10 billion tokens, with 1.5 billion tokens released at TGE.
This configuration is considered a relatively stable arrangement in institutional-level projects. If you want to participate in the Airdrop, now is the time to start accumulating points. The opportunity is here; whether you can reap the benefits depends on your execution.
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