Audience Context
FINRA suggests reviewing the team, business prospects, assets, issuer claims and use of proceeds. The FTC reminds investors that unrealistic outcome promises are a red flag.
Why This May Be Relevant to You
IC Capital can serve as an example of structured startup logic: the token is not presented as a magic equity substitute, but through conditions, limitations, future conversion and legal documents.
What Problem the IC Capital Model Addresses
The model answers practical questions: what the participant buys, which rights exist before conversion, which rights do not exist, when buyback may be possible and what happens if the fund does not launch.
How This Differs From Typical Crypto Startups
A typical project often hides complex parts until purchase. In a structured approach, the complex parts are brought forward: Public Offer, Token Terms, Risk Disclosure, KYC/AML and Refund Policy.
Who This Is Not For
This is not suitable for people who do not want to read documents or want a product for everyone. High-risk seed participation requires conscious review.
What to Check Before Deciding
Before participating, read the Public Offer, Token Terms and Risk Disclosure, review eligibility, understand the KYC/AML process and decide what portion of capital you are genuinely willing to risk.
FAQ
Is this investment advice?
No. This material explains the model and risks, but it is not personal advice or a recommendation to buy the token.
Does the seed token guarantee returns?
No. The seed token has a conditional role, and future rights are defined by the Public Offer, Token Terms, KYC/AML and other documents.
Where can I read the full terms?
The full terms are in the Public Offer, Token Terms and Risk Disclosure. They should be read before any decision.
Sources and Methodology
This article combines open regulatory and statistical sources with an explanation of the IC Capital model. If legal documents change, the published project documents prevail.