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Ownership and Transferability

3 min read

1. Non-Transferable #

Each Digital Ownership Token (DOT) representing a Medal of Honor establishes a unique, personal connection between the original holder and the project. These tokens are strictly non-transferable, meaning they cannot be sold, traded, or reassigned to third parties under any circumstances.
The sole exception applies in the event of the holder’s death, where the DOT may be transferred to a designated beneficiary. This safeguard ensures the integrity, exclusivity, and personal nature of the Medal and its associated benefits.


2. Non-Tradable #

The Medals of Honor DOTs are designed as participatory tokens within the XDRIP Digital Management LLC ecosystem. They:

  • Hold no external market or exchange value.
  • Are not intended as speculative financial instruments.
  • Cannot be resold, bartered, or used in any form of trading activity.

This structure ensures that the Medals of Honor remain focused on their core purpose: recognizing and enhancing engagement within the project.


3. Exclusive Holder Benefits #

All benefits, privileges, and rewards attached to a Medal of Honor DOT belong exclusively to the original holder. These rights are personal and non-transferable.

  • Any attempted transfer of the DOT automatically terminates all associated benefits.
  • Only designated beneficiaries may inherit these rights upon the holder’s death.

This preserves the direct, personal relationship between the holder and the project.


4. Final Digital Ownership #

Ownership of a Medal of Honor DOT remains permanently tied to the wallet that originally minted it.

  • There are no provisions for resale, reassignment, or voluntary transfer.
  • Upon the holder’s passing, the DOT may only be reassigned to a designated beneficiary.

This ensures that each Medal retains its original purpose and intent, anchored to the identity of its first minter.


Progression and Tier Unlocking #

When you mint a Medal of Honor, you permanently unlock access to higher tiers, regardless of what happens to the original Medal afterward.

  • Minting a Common Medal unlocks the ability to mint Uncommon forever.
  • Even if the Common is sold, transferred, or placed in cold storage, the progression right remains with the original minter.
  • Buyers of previously minted Medals do not inherit progression rights.

Example:

  • You mint a Common Medal for 0.5 BNB.
  • You transfer it to cold storage or sell it.
  • You still retain the ability to mint Uncommon, Rare, Epic, and Legendary.
  • The new holder of your Common Medal cannot mint Uncommon, since they were not the original minter.

Key Distinction:

  • Progression rights → Stay permanently with the original minter.
  • Distribution rights → Follow the current holder of the Medal.

Distribution Mechanics #

Distributions are always allocated to the wallet currently holding the Medal, regardless of who minted it.

  • Medal in Wallet A → Distribution goes to Wallet A.
  • Medal in Wallet B → Distribution goes to Wallet B.

Example:

  • You mint all 5 tiers.
  • You transfer the Common to cold storage and keep the others in a hot wallet.
  • During distribution:
    • Cold storage receives rewards tied to the Common (weight 10).
    • The hot wallet receives rewards tied to Uncommon, Rare, Epic, and Legendary (weight 250).

Critical Points for Holders #

  • Medals can be split across multiple wallets → each wallet receives distributions proportional to the Medals it holds.
  • Progression rights never transfer → only the original minter can advance to higher tiers.
  • Distribution rights always transfer → they follow the current holder of each Medal.
  • If a Medal is stolen, distribution flows to the wallet holding it unless manually overridden.