Cryptoland - A physical crypto island where its community can surround themselves with other like-minded individuals.

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I rewatched the video and noticed a ton of new technical glitches, here's one:
That's not an bug, he's T-posing to assert his dominance over the NFT scam. And in the same scene, there's an guy walking through another guy on the opposite side of the balcony.

Some of the background characters are just standing there during the musical.

And the main love interest in the trailer has an neck like this.

Revolution_60_Loading_Screen.png
 
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Bruh, I watched the entire presentation last night and all I could think was

WHAT THE FUCK?

Everything about this is so clearly a fucking scam, notably promising them "an acre".

Bonus fucking points for that dude going "look at the quality of this 3d animation" and there's lighting flickering the entire animation.

Also:
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More stuff about the project. Someone found the QR code that was looked at here, the theory is they stole the house like they have done with other assets and the QR code is a leftover from one of the people who was related to the original asset, being Eltoro.IT

That's not an bug, he's T-posing to assert his dominance over the NFT scam. And in the same scene, there's an guy walking through another guy on the opposite side of the balcony.

Some of the background characters are just standing there during the musical.

And the main love interest in the trailer has an neck like this.

Revolution_60_Loading_Screen.png
What, you don't like your women like you like your giraffes? Even the black woman in the casino scene has a weird long neck.
 
mint.cryptoland.is is poorly coded and I managed to "buy" parcel 29 through a POST request with random information. It does not attempt to verify any transactions serverside.

(nb: in their API it's marked "pending", just like Kyle Chasse's, so either it doesn't work properly or he was never stupid enough to spend real money on it in the first place.)
 
I got up to six minutes through that video and couldn’t take any more.
tl;dr what we already knew plus solid substantiation of these known facts. They are selling NFTs of land they have no legal authority over, while presenting them as actually representing real land. They claim to have purchased part of an island, but the seller says it's still for sale. Despite the requirement that no United States citizens or residents can "invest," one of the founders, a U.S. citizen, purchased a supposedly $1.3 million NT for $500,000 after the prices were suspiciously lowered then immediately raised after the purchase. The reason for the U.S. ban is pretty obvious. Even if this were completely on the up and up as represented, it would probably be the unlawful trade of unregistered securities, carrying a potential five year prison sentence. And it's one of the most common tools in the arsenal of prosecutors going after crypto-related scams.

tl;dr of tl;dr it's 100% a scam. We already knew that but there's another nail or two in the coffin.
 
More stuff about the project. Someone found the QR code that was looked at here, the theory is they stole the house like they have done with other assets and the QR code is a leftover from one of the people who was related to the original asset, being Eltoro.IT


What, you don't like your women like you like your giraffes? Even the black woman in the casino scene has a weird long neck.
I kind of figured this would go on a little longer before people started seeing it was a scam.
 
This sounds like a gayer virtual reality version of Próspera. Crypto scams are always good fun so maybe this could be something.
E: Wait this isn't virtual reality? This should be more interesting.
Yeah, at first I thought the “land” being purchased was virtual/metaverse “real estate.” When I learned it was supposed to be real land it turned from “wtf” to “holy Jesus Christ wtf” real quick.
 
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Yeah, at first I thought the “land” being purchased was virtual/metaverse “real estate.” When I learned it was supposed to be real land it turned from “wtf” to “holy Jesus Christ wtf” real quick.
And when you hear that shit, your next thought is immediately "and I bet they don't even own that shit." And it is right.
 
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