bunoichi27 NFT on XRPL
bunoichi27
Collection: Nbunnu Bunoichi
With each step, her hakama flows like water, disguising her lightning-fast strikes. In the Edo period, sake symbolized both celebration and preparation for battle.
Issuer: rwUAG1P4uyVjCZH39tuGizuD1s6NwvSWWw
Taxon: 0
- Background: Cherry Blossom Garden
- Color: Black
- Outfit: Hakama
- Accessory: Sake Gourd
- Rarity: Common
NFTokenID: 000A271064FB0350D6F39535FDDC03F479701A994B72DD8C6797A8D005895A35
View and trade this NFT on XRPL.to — the XRP Ledger NFT marketplace.
Frequently Asked Questions about bunoichi27
What is bunoichi27?
bunoichi27 is an XLS-20 NFT on the XRP Ledger from the Nbunnu Bunoichi collection. It has a rarity rank of 19. The NFT has 5 traits. With each step, her hakama flows like water, disguising her lightning-fast strikes. In the Edo period, sake symbolized both celebration and preparation for battle.
How do I buy bunoichi27?
bunoichi27 is not currently listed for sale, but you can place a buy offer through XRPL.to. Connect any XRPL wallet, set your price, and the offer will execute automatically when the owner accepts.
How rare is bunoichi27?
bunoichi27 has a rarity rank of 19 within the Nbunnu Bunoichi collection. Rarity is calculated from trait frequency — lower rank means rarer combinations of attributes.
What traits does bunoichi27 have?
bunoichi27 has 5 traits encoded in its NFT metadata. Each trait contributes to the rarity score based on how common or rare that attribute is across the entire Nbunnu Bunoichi .
Who owns bunoichi27?
bunoichi27 is currently owned by rMLwBUc2HZjfwvJLabFinEnCYEpdn9PAYF. NFT ownership on the XRP Ledger is fully on-chain and transparent — you can verify the current owner at any time on XRPL.to.
What is XLS-20?
XLS-20 is the XRP Ledger's native NFT standard, launched in October 2022. Unlike Ethereum NFTs which require smart contracts, XLS-20 NFTs are built into the XRPL protocol — meaning lower fees, faster settlement, and built-in royalty enforcement. bunoichi27 is one of these native XLS-20 tokens.

Properties
Description
With each step, her hakama flows like water, disguising her lightning-fast strikes. In the Edo period, sake symbolized both celebration and preparation for battle.