This website needs js to run.

During 2130s, the great supermassive black hole Sagittarius A*, at the center of the milky way, suddenly started expanding his event horizon far beyond lightspeed rate while emitting the strongest Hawking radiation ever registered. This sort of second big bang swallowed every obejct inside the galaxy including our Solar System. Sounded like the end but something unpredictable happened... Our Solar System was the superposition of all the possible star-systems available by physics laws; that's why the black hole, immediatly after its passage, collapsed the superposition state we were living into most of thepossible outcomes: 5800 new planets that form what we call the Solan System: the first Multimetaverse ever seen.

 Holy Hoooole! And now what happens?

Some of the generated Planets may result in unstable configurations (keeping the floor price for too much time). When the energy collected by the system will be enough, a wormhole will appear near the minted first floor price Planet absorbing it and sending it away in the unreachable multimetaverse. It will be actually bought back from the secondary market when the total 5% royalties applied on every transaction will be enough to cover the price, and then burnt (removed forever from circulation). In this way the overall supply of Solan System Planets is reduced and diamond hand holders will benefit from a rised floor price and higher price pressure.

TUYAMA#316

144Views

Background

Black

Atmosphere

None

Planet

Solturn

Explosion

None

Satellities

None

Rings

None

Object

Yellow Comet

Gravity

172.62 m/s^2

Temperature

4270 K

Pressure

8992794408 Pa

Radius

27436 Km

5,800 uniquely generated, hand-drawn Planets on Solana that risk to vanish from the multimetaverse.
collectibles
other

2XeJ...89Nk

TUYAMA#316

License: None attached
0.4
Doublecheck everything before you buy!How to spot fakes?
  • Details
  • History
  • Bids
Royalties on secondary sales: 5 %
Listed by: JBsj...zuhd
Mint address: BcwE...sVgK
NFT metadata: View on SolScan
More from this collection