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🔎 RTFKT sued
I read the entire lawsuit

Hey frens!
Today is Tuesday, and we’re talking about that Nike lawsuit, the Opera browser’s crypto moves, and more.
Plus, if you’re interested in crypto venture capital news, subscribe to Blockworks’ Empire newsletter. Empire’s Katherine Ross has a wealth of knowledge on legal processes as well as the crypto VC landscape.
I think it’d be a killer complimentary newsletter to read alongside The Drop to get fully informed on more aspects of crypto, especially if you’re a trader or a builder.
Now, let’s talk about Nike.
— Kate Irwin

Nike sued over “brazen rug pull”
An RTFKT buyer in Australia is suing Nike via a proposed class-action lawsuit, accusing the apparel giant of deceptive practices, unfair competition, unjust enrichment, and unlawful trade practices with its numerous NFT collections.
The lawsuit, filed last week in the Eastern District of New York, alleges that Nike committed a “brazen rug pull” via its subsidiary RTFKT, pronounced “artifact,” which it acquired in late 2021.
“Nike used its iconic brand and marketing prowess to hype, promote, and prop up the unregistered securities that RTFKT sold,” the filing viewed by Blockworks alleges.
The 42-page filing argues in detail that what RTFKT sold across a range of different NFT collections were actually securities under US law. But it also makes the overarching argument that even if a court finds those digital assets not to be securities, there are still five counts in the lawsuit to reckon with. It also argues the rug pull that it says occurred is a “deceptive act” in and of itself.
Nike is accused of violating the New York Deceptive Acts and Practices Unlawful Act, the California Unfair Competition Law, the Florida Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act, and the Oregon Unlawful Trade Practices Act.
It further alleges “Unjust Enrichment,” accusing Nike of further “enriching” itself with the NFT buyers’ funds.
The dispute is over a minimum of $5 million, but the filing does not specifically state a dollar amount of damages desired.
Nike made piles of cash from RTFKT. One dashboard found that the CloneX “Mintvials” generated over $80 million in revenue alone.
RTFKT trading activity peaked in 2022, but it had substantially subsided by 2023. The CloneX avatars made with artist Takashi Murakami were the most successful collection by far.
RTFKT then announced it was shutting down in December 2024, just three years after Nike acquired it. No reason for the shutdown was provided.
RTFKT Head of Tech Samuel Cardillo declined to comment. Cardillo has publicly referred to himself as “the last man standing” at the Nike subsidiary.
Blockworks reached out to Nike as well as RTFKT cofounders Chris Le and Benoit Pagotto for comment. Le’s Linkedin shows that he left RTFKT and Nike in January 2025, but Pagotto’s profile still shows him as employed at Nike and RTFKT.
Last week, a day before the lawsuit was filed, the art for the CloneX RTFKT NFTs disappeared overnight due to an issue with its Cloudflare hosting plan. Cardillo later said the issue was due to an error, not an unpaid bill. The collection’s art was then subsequently restored. Cloudflare did not reply to Blockworks’ previous request for comment.
On Monday, Cardillo said the CloneX NFTs had migrated (off Cloudflare) to Arweave for “permanent storage.”
If this lawsuit progresses, it won’t be the only class-action suit about an NFT “rug pull.” The class-action lawsuit against Logan Paul’s CryptoZoo NFT game remains ongoing as well.
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Opera’s MiniPay adds Binance Connect
The self-custodial MiniPay crypto wallet from web browser firm Opera now has Binance Connect, a fiat-to-crypto integration that lets users turn their local currency into crypto.
MiniPay uses the Ethereum L2 chain Celo and was first launched in 2023.
MiniPay is mobile-only. It can be accessed within the Opera Mini browser app for Android or via the MiniPay app for Android. The iOS MiniPay app is expected “very soon,” an Opera spokesperson told me (it’s currently in TestFlight).
If you’re a desktop user, the standard Opera browser has offered its own separate crypto wallet since 2022.
MiniPay has a design that’s closer to CashApp than a traditional crypto wallet like MetaMask. This makes MiniPay more like Venmo or CashApp than something like the Brave Wallet (or the Opera browser wallet).
App revenue is UP
Crypto app revenue is the highest it’s even been, according to data compiled by Blockworks Research.
A massive spike in app revenue occurred in the last few months of 2024, with even higher revenues in the first quarter of 2025.
Trade tooling and launchpad apps made up a large portion of that revenue spike, but spot DEXs, wallets, and NFTs are seeing more revenue overall, too.
Quarterly application revenue by sector from Blockworks Research
Guess crypto isn’t doing so bad after all.

Blockchain firm wants to buy Fyre Festival. What could go wrong?
Burnt XION is officially exploring and has made an opening bid for the acquisition of FYRE Festival for $200,000.
We believe FYRE Festival offers a unique opportunity to reach 10,000s of influential creative people and introduce blockchain to a culturally engaged audience.
FYRE
— XION (@burnt_xion)
7:34 PM • Apr 28, 2025