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Sale of Bored Apes' Metaverse Land Made Gas Fees Skyrocket Past $3,000 (mashable.com) 111

There's a new metaverse project from the creators of the "Bored Apes Yacht Club" NFTs. Last night they held a "virtual land" sale, reports Bloomberg, raising nearly a third of a billion dollars.

At about the same time, Mashable noticed something else happening: If you were trying to complete a transaction on the Ethereum network last night, you might have been taken aback by the ridiculously high gas fees you saw.

For example, one user purchased a $25 NFT on Saturday evening. Their total price? $3,325. That's $3,300 just in fees.

Every transaction on their blockchain incurs a fee (which rises based on the number of concurrent transactions), the article points out. "Ethereum transactions can fail if a user doesn't pay enough in gas fees. When this happens, not only does the transaction not go through, but the user is still charged the gas fee."

"Ethereum proved unusable for hours due to its inability to distribute the load..." reports CNET. "Someone tweeted a picture of them trying to send $100 in crypto from one wallet to another, showing it required $1,700 in gas fees....

"Over $175 million was spent on gas alone."

Mashable adds: An overwhelmed Ethereum Network....caused fees to skyrocket to astronomically high amounts.... One cryptocurrency advocate noticed that from just the Bored Ape's NFT sale, approximately $100 million were wasted during the first hour of the "land" sale in gas fees alone.

As mentioned earlier, transactions can often fail when the Ethereum network is facing unusually high traffic. And last night, many people paid thousands in gas fees for transactions that didn't even go through.

Yuga Labs says it will refund users those fees, but it's unclear just how the company plans to do that. Also, Yuga Labs will ostensibly only cover the fees from failed transactions directly involving the company. If you're a user who was attempting an unrelated transaction, you can say goodbye to those thousands in lost fees....

However, there was at least one winner from the Saturday night sale: Yuga Labs. The owner of the Bored Ape Yacht Club brand raked in $285 million from the NFT sale.

Transaction costs just to mint the Otherdeed NFTs after the launch "reached $123 million," reports Bloomberg, "with each Otherdeed requiring about $6,000, or two Ether, in transaction fees to mint, according to data from Etherscan — or more than the price of the deed itself." Yuga Labs apologised on Twitter for "turning off the light on Ethereum", and suggested the possibility of establishing an ApeCoin blockchain.
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Sale of Bored Apes' Metaverse Land Made Gas Fees Skyrocket Past $3,000

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  • Architecture (Score:5, Insightful)

    by gbooch ( 323588 ) <egrady@booch.com> on Sunday May 01, 2022 @07:07PM (#62495038) Homepage

    Ethereum is architecturally unsound.

    If a third-party is able to bring the ecosystem to its knees, it is evident that there exist intractable flaws.

    • Re:Architecture (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Lisandro ( 799651 ) on Sunday May 01, 2022 @07:21PM (#62495056)

      Just this week the Solana network went down because a couple NFT bots spammed it with transactions.

      Remember, people want to reinvent finances around these.

      • by narcc ( 412956 )

        people want to reinvent finances around these.

        Only really stupid people.

        We've known for ages that digital currencies are absolutely awful at their raison d'etre. Ten years from now, we'll be reading stories about that crazy time the world spent billions buying nothing.

      • by shmlco ( 594907 )

        Visa processes thousands upon thousands of transactions per second, for a transaction cost of pennies on the dollar.

        Anything the purports to be a worthwhile "currency" needs to be able to do the same.

    • Worse has happened before. Not too long ago they had to completely fork Ethereum to roll back some transactions. https://spectrum.ieee.org/hack... [ieee.org]

      I wouldn't trust Ethereum for anything serious. It's a fun toy though, I will definitely say that.

      • Sure, it's a fun way to watch the world burn.

        They claim they're going to PoS any day now, but if they're still having problems like these I'm betting they're going to push that back indefinitely.

        • these "problems" -- by which you mean network congestion due to popularity of the platform -- are irrelevant from PoS and PoS is the next step on the roadmap to a more scalable ethereum.
          • these "problems" -- by which you mean network congestion due to popularity of the platform

            Wipe your mouth before you say that shit. A properly designed platform wouldn't become unusable because it became popular. This is caused by inadequate design.

            • You should go and design a crypto currency that has all the features of ethereum and none of the scaling challenges.
              • I didn't say it was easy. But I don't care how easy it is, or isn't. I didn't say they were a bunch of big dum-dums because it was inadequate.

    • The network is behaving as designed. Using L1 for dumb shit is dumb. They could have minted all these on Loopring or another L2 for pennies. There's a reason GameStop is launching their NFT platform on loopring and not on L1.
      • It has to be on Ethereum. They make their money on royalties when someone sells and Opensea only supports a few networks. Also nobody wants to make their users switch networks just to access a token.
    • Ethereum is architecturally unsound.

      It's doing exactly what it was designed to do: create artificial scarcity to increase the value for Ethereum HODLers. The fact that it sucks horribly as a currency doesn't matter, because it was designed from the ground up to be a speculative investment for those who missed out on Bitcoin, ostensibly with "features" that make it unique among the vast field of competing shitcoins.

    • All the fancy features of these knockoff coins introduce instability and insecurity. That is before we consider that PoS is a ponzi scheme. This is why I stick to BTC where a privacy coin isn't required.
    • All crypto currencies are only useful for drug money laundering. Normal people should not touch any of it with a barge pole.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Is this something to do with European countries needing to buy Russian gas with easily launderable "currencies"?

  • by Lisandro ( 799651 ) on Sunday May 01, 2022 @07:13PM (#62495042)

    Cheapest way to send money, bro!

    • And still I wonder why anyone in his, her, or its right mind would choose to carry on business this way. What is the actual value of paying for things with such a volatile currency?
      • by Catvid-22 ( 9314307 ) on Sunday May 01, 2022 @07:38PM (#62495086)
        Buying NFTs are the one thing cryptos are good for. Trading two things of doubtful value. Yup, that's the future of commerce, capitalism reduced to its purest essence.
      • And still I wonder why anyone in his, her, or its right mind would choose to carry on business this way. What is the actual value of paying for things with such a volatile currency?

        Because a lot of people are not in their right mind

      • Forget volatile, what about reliability. "many people paid thousands in gas fees for transactions that didn't even go through" Yeah. That's exacly the sort of thing I am looking for in a settlement platform. And to think people used to complain about Western Union...

        In this case it hardly matters though. These people didn't "pay for things", they gambled on virtual land in a virtual environment that doesn't even exist yet, solely on the strength that it carries the Bored Ape brand. Apes are cool,
  • Or are people just sending it out and not bothering to check what the fees are? That's on them if so.

    • It certainly tells you, and people are throwing their money anyway.

      F.ex. someone paid $3300 in gas fees... for a $25 NFT [twitter.com].

      • It certainly tells you, and people are throwing their money anyway.

        F.ex. someone paid $3300 in gas fees... for a $25 NFT [twitter.com].

        It's amazing that people are falling for the modern version of selling oceanfront property in Kansas. Who the hell is buying this crap anyway?

        • People in the third world wanting to experience the American dream?
          • People in the third world wanting to experience the American dream?

            Well, they're told lies while getting scammed by ruthless manipulators who don't care about them and see them only as ignorant marks.

            It looks to me like they're experiencing the American dream all right.

          • People in the third world wanting to experience the American dream?

            Well - it isn't going to work for them.

            So many people are totally convinced that they can become wealthy overnight. They use the few as examples that they can do it. Not thinking that there are what - 8 billion people on earth, and those who achieve overnight success are the huge exception.

            And with that outlook - we start to understand why grifters are so successful. People demand to be grifted.

          • Fuck I am an American and would love to afford the American Dream.
            That shit is fucking expensive.
        • At least Kansas will eventually have ocean front property.
      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

        It's going to the moon bro.

    • I'm not familiar with the Etherium network, but on the Bitcoin network, it doesn't tell you, because that's difficult. What happens is when each computer is attempting to mine a block, they pick what transactions they wish to include. Each miner picks their own set of transactions. Generally, it's safe to assume most miners will pick the highest fee transactions they can, but these transactions can come in at the last second, and not every miner necessarily sees every potential transaction. So it's theoreti

    • They know what the fees are. They're driven by FOMO.
  • I love watching Things Designed By Techies fail. Who could have possibly imagined this failure? Designers?
  • 'Gas fee'??? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by superdave80 ( 1226592 ) on Sunday May 01, 2022 @07:27PM (#62495064)
    Who comes up with this terminology? Is this just so they don't have to call it what it really is, a transaction fee? Every time I read 'gas fee' in the summary I imagined some guy filling up his Prius to go deliver some Ethereum somewhere...
  • by Joe_Dragon ( 2206452 ) on Sunday May 01, 2022 @07:33PM (#62495080)

    crypto will fail for day to day use with fees like this and do you really want to deal with long lines if you don't want to pay and have to wait for the low fee transaction to happen.

    • by splutty ( 43475 )

      It can't fail for day to day use, because it's utterly useless for day to day use to begin with.

      That's like saying water will fail to be human :)

    • For day to day use people will use a L2. This was a special event.
      • Until that L2 becomes bogged down and we need an L3, L4, L5, L6, L7.

        How do you know you can trust an "L2"? There will obviously be thousands, if not tens of thousands of them.

        The transaction rate needs to be increased by around 5 orders of magnitude to even begin to be acceptable. Is that even possible? And how fast will the size of the blockchain grow then?

        It's just a terrible, awful, no-good solution.

    • there are plenty of other, much bigger reasons for crypto to fail for day to day. Like the rampant market centralization, random & wild swings in valuation & rampant fraud. Why single out skyrocketing and unpredictable fees?
  • by awwshit ( 6214476 ) on Sunday May 01, 2022 @07:35PM (#62495084)

    It is important to keep the network slow and small to make sure you can pull of the best grift during busy times.

  • by devslash0 ( 4203435 ) on Sunday May 01, 2022 @07:45PM (#62495100)

    > "When this happens, not only does the transaction not go through, but the user is still charged the gas fee."

    How is this not an outright theft? Why are transactions not atomic and fees not an integral part of a transaction?

    • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Sunday May 01, 2022 @08:06PM (#62495132)

      > "When this happens, not only does the transaction not go through, but the user is still charged the gas fee."

      How is this not an outright theft? Why are transactions not atomic and fees not an integral part of a transaction?

      Because in a crypto world, there is no such thing as theft. They make this shit up as they go along, and the base premise is to run dollars into vapor. They get the dollars, and you get the vapor. All legitimate by cryptodefinition.

    • by Pembers ( 250842 ) on Sunday May 01, 2022 @08:47PM (#62495238) Homepage

      > "When this happens, not only does the transaction not go through, but the user is still charged the gas fee."

      How is this not an outright theft? Why are transactions not atomic and fees not an integral part of a transaction?

      Ethereum (and any other proof-of-work cryptocurrency) can't scale to more than a few tens of transactions per second. If you had to pay a transaction fee only if the transaction was successful, it would be trivial to DDoS the network by sending lots of transactions for the equivalent of a fraction of a cent. As it is, you can still try that, but it quickly gets expensive.

      • Then the entire model is faulty by design. The subject of the purchase should firstly be put in a locked state, transaction should be approved outside of the transaction processing chain and only thrown into the blockchain when successful with known, fixed and approved fees agreed upon before the final checkout.

        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          Cryptocurrencies aren't some e-commerce site. You're not buying something, you're asking a random computer on the Internet with God-for-10-minutes to pretty please write a message for you. If you include a bribe it's more likely to do it. And there's lots of competition, so really you better include a bribe.

          Okay, so it IS kind of like buying concert tickets.

        • by Pembers ( 250842 )

          Then the entire model is faulty by design. The subject of the purchase should firstly be put in a locked state, transaction should be approved outside of the transaction processing chain and only thrown into the blockchain when successful with known, fixed and approved fees agreed upon before the final checkout.

          The reason for all the number crunching is to prevent double spending (sending the same coin to two different accounts) without needing a central authority that keeps track of who has which coins. If you want a locking mechanism that ensures your transaction will succeed before you pay any fees, you either need a central authority that keeps track of which coins are currently locked and where they're due to be sent (which goes against what cryptocurrency is supposed to be), or the locking mechanism will be

    • by narcc ( 412956 )

      You're on the verge of enlightenment.

    • You're paying for computer time, and you got it.

      One of the hallmarks of crypto is that you're never buying what you think you're buying. It's why it's such a great scam.
    • How is this not an outright theft?

      Better yet, why would anyone buy cryptocurrency which operates in this manner in the first place? It's like buying a cigarette lighter that leaks fluid and sometimes sets your hands on fire, by design.

  • So it would have been cheaper to send a check/cheque in the post.
  • If you put up with ticketmaster then you are one of the chumps that has no problem with Ethereum fees.
    (They named it ticketmaster because Baal-zebub was taken.)
    Looks like blockchain 'money' and nft's were created simply to enrich these greedy leeches.

  • I guess ETH has a rather constrained supply of transactions, so this makes sense. If the demand for transactions suddenly spikes, and the supply is constrained, then the price for transactions is likely to go up. Simple economics.

    This doesn't happen with USD because the supply of transactions is virtually infinite. Somebody on the other side of town could sell a dozen houses in five minutes. It doesn't affect my credit card processing fees.

    If the crypto bros can't find a way to make transactions more pl

    • As time has moved on, crypto bros have slowly drawn the conclusion that BTC is 'like digital gold' in that you don't want to trade it very often anyway, you just want to accumulate a lot and watch its value rise. It's a store of value; an investment. The further I look into crypto, the more I'm going to need an explanation as to how even that is possible in the long term.
      • That aspect of it might actually be sustainable. I think of it as a betting pool where the event they're betting on never actually occurs. Regulation, as gambling or otherwise, seems like the biggest risk to that. Last year I gave crypto a 2nd look, and soon came to the conclusion that receiving it for goods or services was a non-starter due to the tax treatment--income at market rate as soon as you receive it. Huge PiTA.

  • having my fees shoot up 10x at random is just fine, and wouldn't cause me any concern.

    Seriously, we need a new word. "Cryptocurrency" doesn't cut it as these things are completely useless as currencies. And no, layering other protocols on top with exchanges is not a "solution". Especially when more than a few of them have been hacked and the proceeds lost. Or when the exchanges have literally confiscated money because it was "stolen".
  • Gas fee ? Really, How/what is this even acceptable/legit ? Is for for all the energy used for a transaction ?
  • Does anyone see a problem here?
  • The "Emperors' New Clothes Clothiers" business. You pay me thousands of dollars, and I send you a unique link to a blank jpeg picture.
  • by DarkRookie2 ( 5551422 ) on Monday May 02, 2022 @02:45PM (#62497204)
    That seems to be the market I want.
    Fuck all that mining and speculation crap, just set up some box to collect gas and it seems I will be set.
  • This one thing should disqualify the whole damn enterprise as asinine. There's not a lot of things on the frontiers of technology that really, truly make me shake my head in wonder, but this gets me there. This is an Onion article come to life.

    WTF is going on? When did the IQ of the technical world slip 30 points?

  • The transactions fees always skyrocket when there's a run on the bank.
    This has been recorded quite clearly across cryptocurrency every time it starts climbing again.
    There have been numerous days-long stretches where you just aren't going to get your Bitcoin transaction through without paying enormous transaction fees.
    When Crypto Kitties did it to Ethereum, it was a blast.
    This is what I always think about when I see people proselytizing it with "banking for the unbanked!" and "financial freedom from the g
  • So you pay $25 for an NFT, then have to pay $3300 in fees. Just from the fees, you are already down over 99% on your investment. The NFT would have to rise approximately 26400% to $6625 just for you to break even on your investment.

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