tyler ↑
@trh
Imagine you wanted to sell an NFT for $80 when the floor is $100. As it turns out, OpenSea has a token in the same set that's listed for $100. OpenSea allows you to set what you receive ($80), but will list it at the floor. If your token sells for $100, OpenSea pockets the $20 (plus standard fees). You cannot sell the token for less than OS is listing theirs. This is how SeatGeek works. (At least in some places) Is this normal?
0 reply
0 recast
1 reaction