Unicore is a new type of fixed-supply token inspired by @unipegv4, where every whole token you hold activates an on-chain object: a Unicore. Each object has a rarity tier rolled at the moment of purchase, and that rarity controls how much of the protocol’s ETH rewards the object earns for its holder. Think of it as your rewards multiplier.
The reward stream comes from a flat 3% tax on every Uniswap v4 swap. Holders share that tax pool pro rata, based on their objects’ rarity weights.
Every time a user sells a whole token, 1 UNICORE on-chain object gets destroyed. The fewer Unicores there are, the more rewards the remaining holders receive.
Deflation that rewards those who hodl.
https://t.co/UGCLDIM6D9
https://t.co/KkvZ8ozMd4
I've been digging into the $upeg project, and they're building something bigger than most people think.
You've probably seen the thesis:
"Interesting project. Each swap generates unique 24×24 fully on-chain SVG unicorn pixel art (no IPFS). Fixed 10k supply. Blends token + generative NFT as 'on-chain object'. Trading creates art."
But this is not the ACTUAL thesis.
What @unipegv4 is actually building is way bigger.
Traditional NFTs die from illiquidity. You mint, list, and wait. Floors collapse because no AMM is holding bids. The asset and the market for it are two separate things, and the market usually disappears.
Unipeg fuses them. The trade itself becomes the generative event, and the pool IS the secondary market. One of the cleanest demonstrations of where v4 hooks are headed.
And there's a clever wrinkle. Hold a whole $upeg, you get a unicorn. Sell below a whole token and the unicorn burns. Buy back up and a new one mints. Right now 3,218 of the 10k supply sits as fractional dust, meaning only 6,782 unicorns actually exist on-chain. The "dust dominance ratio" (0.47) tracks this in real time. The higher it goes, the fewer unicorns exist, the rarer each one becomes.
This is bullish mechanically. As trading heats up, supply gets split across more wallets, dust dominance rises, and circulating unicorns drop below the 10k cap. Scarcity becomes a function of volume itself.
What the broader v4 hook model could unlock:
> Sports cards and collectibles. Pool-based cards are always priced, with art that can update with player stats. Topps NFTs flopped because there was no volume/liquidity, this fixes the structural side.
> In-game items. Loot drops with built-in buyback. Every sword, skin, or rare item has an automatic exit price the moment you stop playing.
> Generative art and PFPs. Mint through trading, not bot-dominated gas wars. Supply curve set by the market in real time.
What this approach fixes about the old NFT model:
> No IPFS rug. Everything lives on-chain as SVG, no link rot, no vanishing JPEGs.
> No royalty enforcement wars. Fees baked into the swap, paid by protocol, not goodwill.
> No dead collections. Even at zero hype, the pool still quotes a price.
NFTs were supposed to be programmable assets. Most ended up as static images on a CDN.
Unipeg is one of the cleanest demonstrations of treating the trade itself as the primitive.
That's the actual thesis.
(i'm still learning more about the model so pls correct me on stuff if I was wrong)
With their marketplace going live soon, and the overall way the team is communicating and building, I can see this trade A LOT higher soon.
>be markus magnusson
>launch 4 collections
>invisible friends
>garbage friends
>3d invisible friends
>typical friends x tony babel
>make over 1880ETH / $8,300,000 USD
>abandon every project
>don't post a single tweet for over an year
>come back in 2025 to launch another collection
>get called out by people instantly
>fail to extract because people are not retarded anymore
>log off for 12 months
>then come back in 2026 like nothing happened
>try to play it off but people remember
>he will try to extract and rug people again (won't happen because we won't allow that)
>think this is the only thing he has done?
>his wife also launched uglysweaters
>made around $1,000,000 USD
>also abandoned the project
>point of the story?
>don't let the same people extract over and over again
>this time be cautious and don't let him do as he pleases
send Invisible Friends to 0
Elders aren’t gods. They’re not perfect, and they’re definitely not always right.Stop putting them on some imaginary throne. Respect them like any other human.
Nothing more, nothing less.
Teach your kids to think, not to blindly obey.
Harsh reality.
A bad day is coming.
Unless you die - you will experience:
Your father's death. Or your wife. Or brother. Etc
The above are 100% certain to happen - sooner or later.
If that day isn't today. Smile.
Be happy.
You'll have plenty to cry about soon enough.