Play-to-earn NFT platform Vulcan Forged said on Tuesday that it has refunded $140 million worth of PYR tokens to nearly all investors a day after the platform was hacked.
- The platform, which is built on the Polygon network, offers over six blockchain games, a decentralized exchange, as well as a non-fungible token (NFT) marketplace.
- “All My Forge wallets have been secured. Only a few needing PYR back,” the developers in a tweet. They said that a buyback and token burn — mechanisms that see projects purchase tokens on the open market and send tokens to a ‘burn’ address respectively — will be conducted in the following days.
Update: The majority of PYR has been refunded to affected wallets from the VF treasury.
We have isolated the tokens stolen from all CEX exchanges. We are working to identify footprints.
A 100% decentralized solution was perhaps the ray of light in this.
All dev carries on.
— Vulcan Forged (@VulcanForged) December 13, 2021
- All refunds were made from Vulcan Forged’s treasury, a fund that crypto projects use to save money for crises. Refunds were made in PYR and LAVA tokens, starting late Monday night and continuing until Tuesday morning.
- PYR tokens fell 34% to $21 on Monday following news of the hack. PYR recovered slightly to $24 during European hours on Monday and retreated to $21.15 at press time.
- Hackers stole 4.5 million PYR — nearly 9% of the token’s total supply — worth $140 million at the time, alongside relatively smaller amounts of ether and polygon (MATIC).
- The hackers got hold of over 96 private keys belonging to some of the biggest Vulcan Forged users. Private keys are digital signatures that prove ownership of an underlying address, allowing only their holders to move funds from those addresses.