Bored Bears Club

Mint Date
Dec. 23, 2023
Mint Time
3 p.m. UTC
Mint Price
0.003Ξ
Total Supply
1,000 NFTs
Raffle Time
Dec. 21, 2023, 3 a.m.
Official Link
boredbearsclub.xyz
Verified Twitter
BoredBearsNFTs
This project will be overallocating. That means that if you win, you will NOT be guaranteed a spot. Please see the project description for more information.

Once upon a time in the enchanted land of Crypto Forest, there was a group of bears who were so bored that they formed a club. They called themselves the Bored Bears Club, and their motto was "If life gives you honey, make a meme out of it!"

The leader of the club was Barry the Bored Bear, a bear with a perpetually unimpressed expression. Barry gathered his fellow bored bears – Grumpy Gus, Sassy Sue, and Laid-back Larry – to embark on some hilarious NFT adventures.

One day, Barry decided they needed a club headquarters, so he purchased a virtual treehouse in the heart of the Crypto Forest using blockchain magic. The treehouse was equipped with holographic honey jars, meme-making machines, and a dance floor where the bears could break it down to the latest blockchain beats.

The Bored Bears Club became famous for their NFT masterpieces. Grumpy Gus created grumpy cat memes featuring bears, while Sassy Sue designed sassy bear stickers that became the talk of the Crypto Forest. Laid-back Larry, well, he just laid back and enjoyed the memes.

But their fame didn't come without challenges. The Mischievous Monkeys of the Crypto Forest, jealous of the bears' success, tried to steal their honey-filled NFTs. In response, the Bored Bears Club organized a meme battle that went viral across the blockchain.

The battle was fierce, with bears and monkeys slinging memes at each other like digital warriors. The bears emerged victorious, and the Mischievous Monkeys had to concede defeat, admitting that the Bored Bears Club was the reigning meme champion of Crypto Forest.

As the sun set on another day in the Crypto Forest, the Bored Bears Club celebrated their triumph with a virtual honey feast and danced the night away in their treehouse. Little did they know that their NFT adventures were just beginning, and the Crypto Forest held many more surprises for the hilariously bored bears.

And so, the legend of the Bored Bears Club continued, spreading joy, laughter, and honey-filled memes throughout the digital wilderness of the blockchain.

Log in to see the results.

Bored Bears Club has picked winners. Login to see if you're on the list!

Once upon a time in the enchanted land of Crypto Forest, there was a group of bears who were so bored that they formed a club. They called themselves the Bored Bears Club, and their motto was "If life gives you honey, make a meme out of it!"

The leader of the club was Barry the Bored Bear, a bear with a perpetually unimpressed expression. Barry gathered his fellow bored bears – Grumpy Gus, Sassy Sue, and Laid-back Larry – to embark on some hilarious NFT adventures.

One day, Barry decided they needed a club headquarters, so he purchased a virtual treehouse in the heart of the Crypto Forest using blockchain magic. The treehouse was equipped with holographic honey jars, meme-making machines, and a dance floor where the bears could break it down to the latest blockchain beats.

The Bored Bears Club became famous for their NFT masterpieces. Grumpy Gus created grumpy cat memes featuring bears, while Sassy Sue designed sassy bear stickers that became the talk of the Crypto Forest. Laid-back Larry, well, he just laid back and enjoyed the memes.

But their fame didn't come without challenges. The Mischievous Monkeys of the Crypto Forest, jealous of the bears' success, tried to steal their honey-filled NFTs. In response, the Bored Bears Club organized a meme battle that went viral across the blockchain.

The battle was fierce, with bears and monkeys slinging memes at each other like digital warriors. The bears emerged victorious, and the Mischievous Monkeys had to concede defeat, admitting that the Bored Bears Club was the reigning meme champion of Crypto Forest.

As the sun set on another day in the Crypto Forest, the Bored Bears Club celebrated their triumph with a virtual honey feast and danced the night away in their treehouse. Little did they know that their NFT adventures were just beginning, and the Crypto Forest held many more surprises for the hilariously bored bears.

And so, the legend of the Bored Bears Club continued, spreading joy, laughter, and honey-filled memes throughout the digital wilderness of the blockchain.

Have questions?

Here are some answers to commonly asked questions. Did we miss something? DM us on Twitter to ask anything else.

Yes. ~50 million list registrations have happened on PREMINT without issue. When you sign in with PREMINT, you only are validating ownership of the wallet address. PREMINT does not get any permissions to perform transactions and does not have any way of withdrawing anything from your wallet.
Premint has been used by some of the top artists and collections in the NFT ecosystem, including XCOPY, Coldie, DeekayMotion, Cool Cats, Known Origin, Async Art, Shaq, and over 25,000 more.
Signing is the only way we can truly know that you are the owner of the wallet you are connecting. Signing is a safe, gas-less transaction that does not in any way give PREMINT permission to perform any transactions with your wallet.
PREMINT saves your wallet and social info as a part of the registration step, so you can disconnect everything afterwards and your entry is still valid.
As far as PREMINT is concerned, yes, but the project owner might check that you still own the token before finalizing the list.
If you fully registered, the only way your wallet wouldn’t be on the list of registered wallets is if the project removed it. PREMINT never deletes wallets from the list for any reason.
If you don’t know what wallet your Discord or Twitter are connected to, just go to https://premint.xyz/disconnect and you can force-disconnect them.
While creators are welcome to name their PREMINT projects whatever they like, we choose to use the term "allow list" or "access list" vs "whitelist." "Whitelist" could be considered exclusionary language, and the spirit of web3 is about inclusion.