NFT Insider

Nakamigos to Drop Fukuhedrons, Coming December 13

Nakamigos is set to drop its latest digital collectible project, Fukuhedrons, on December 13.

These characters, minted on Bitcoin using the Ordinals protocol, are the newest addition to HiFo Labs’ blockchain collectibles.

The drop includes free minting options for eligible HiFo Labs NFT holders.

What are Fukuhedrons?
Source: Nakamigos

What are Fukuhedrons?

Fukuhedrons are digital characters minted as Bitcoin Ordinals. They are released under the same licensing framework as previous Nakamigos projects.

HiFo Labs has developed projects such as Nakamigos, Cloaks, Crypto Trading Cards, and Hal Froggy.

The Fukuhedrons drop extends their work on blockchain-based collectibles.

Source: Nakamigos

How to participate in the latest Nakamigos mint?

The Fukuhedrons mint will occur on Magic Eden on December 13 in two phases—the Allowlist and Public mint.

To qualify for the allowlist, participants must:

  1. Hold a HiFo Labs NFT (e.g., Nakamigos, Cloaks, Crypto Trading Cards, Hal Froggy) as of the snapshot on November 21 at 11:59 PM EST.
  2. Submit a Bitcoin Ordinals address by December 9 at 11:59 PM EST. Submissions can be made via the Nakamigos website, which includes guidance on creating an Ordinals wallet.

Eligible participants can mint their free Fukuhedron during the allowlist window whilst collectors without HiFo Labs NFTs can participate in the public mint.

Any unclaimed Fukuhedrons during the allowlist phase will be available for public sale at 2:30 PM EST with each NFT priced at 0.0019 BTC (~$191.56 as of writing).

This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.

Exit mobile version