Ramine Darabiha · Product and R&D Leader

Hyperminter

DNS

Drop in your art, edit metadata in bulk, mint the whole set in one click. The most-used batch minter on Tezos.

Founder and CEO of DNS, where my team built Hyperminter.

Minting on Tezos was a developer task wearing a creator's clothes. Releasing a collection meant contracts, metadata schemas, IPFS pinning, gas, and a dozen quiet ways to corrupt a token. Most artists gave up or paid someone to do it for them.

Hyperminter made it feel like uploading photos: drag in a batch of work, edit the metadata for one piece or all of them at once, and mint the whole set in a single click, images, video, or audio. The machinery stayed exactly where it was. The creator stopped touching it.

It became the most-used batch minter on Tezos. In the beta alone, close to twenty creators minted more than two thousand pieces, and it ranked first for "Tezos batch minter."

A bad minting tool shows you the blockchain. A good one hides it until the only thing left on screen is the work.

Gallery

  • Metadata, royalties, creators, and licensing, editable per piece or across the whole batch in one view.
  • Where it started: the same job when minting still looked like a form a developer left behind.
  • The whole set minted in one click. Contracts, metadata schemas, and IPFS pinning happen out of sight.

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