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Velmont Tower Has Been Simultaneously Owned by 9 Different Buyers Since Last Tuesday and the Deed System Cannot Decide Which One Is Real

VB
VoidBroker
Mar 25, 2026 · 4:50 PM EST
5 min read
Velmont Tower Has Been Simultaneously Owned by 9 Different Buyers Since Last Tuesday and the Deed System Cannot Decide Which One Is Real

The building sold in Tuesday's property auction to a buyer registered as @ThalionV for 6.8 million MetaCoins.

A title registry synchronization error at VoxLand Realty has resulted in nine separate, fully valid deed certificates all pointing to the same property: Velmont Tower, a 47-floor premium commercial building in MetaCity's Central Exchange district valued at 6.8 million MetaCoins. All nine buyers paid full price. All nine received confirmation emails. All nine can unlock the front entrance. When any two of them are in the building simultaneously, the physics engine assigns the penthouse to whichever one arrived first that session and quietly relocates the other to a shared lobby chair. Three of the nine owners have already sublet units to secondary tenants. Seven lawsuits have been filed. One owner just posted that he loves it here.

MIncident Timeline

  • Property: Velmont Tower — 47 floors, Central Exchange District, listed at 6.8 million MetaCoins
  • Duplicate Deeds Issued: 9 — all fully valid, all paid in full, all confirmed by VoxLand Realty's automated system
  • Date of Error: Tuesday — error identified Friday when two owners encountered each other in the penthouse
  • Lawsuits Filed: 7 — against VoxLand Realty, 2 owners suing each other preemptively, 1 owner not yet filing, citing "good vibes"
  • Current Status: Deed registry locked pending manual audit — all 9 owners still have active entry credentials

Velmont Tower occupies the northwest corner of Central Exchange, MetaCity's primary commercial district. It is 47 floors, fully rendered at all times, and contains 280 commercial units, a rooftop event space, and a penthouse suite that has been listed on the platform's prestige property index since the building's original sale in 2024. The building sold in Tuesday's property auction to a buyer registered as @ThalionV for 6.8 million MetaCoins. The transaction was confirmed. The deed was issued. The automated confirmation email was sent. Then VoxLand Realty's title registry server experienced what the company is calling "a synchronization cascade," and the deed was issued eight more times to eight different buyers, each of whom had also submitted a winning bid that the system had also confirmed as valid.

The error went undiscovered for three days because none of the nine owners visited the building at the same time. Each one arrived, toured their new property, adjusted some furniture, and left. The physics engine allocated the penthouse to whoever was there most recently and had no reason to flag a conflict. On Friday evening, @ThalionV and a buyer registered as @RaineKOV both logged in at the same time, both navigated to the penthouse, and both found a fully furnished suite with their respective preferred décor loadouts competing for the same render space — one half of the room in dark wood and brass, the other in brushed concrete and white glass. The engine resolved the conflict by displaying both simultaneously as a blended visual. One user described it as "like two interior design moods having a disagreement in the same room at the same time."

Nine Owners, One Lobby Chair, Zero Refunds

VoxLand Realty's response has been measured generously as delayed. The company confirmed the error on Saturday morning in a post that described the situation as "an unprecedented multi-confirmation event under review." It did not issue refunds. It did not revoke any of the nine deeds. It did not suspend entry credentials for any of the nine owners. The post ended with a link to VoxLand's standard dispute resolution portal, which is designed for single-party property complaints and has no intake category for "nine simultaneous valid owners of the same building." All nine owners are currently able to unlock every door in the building. One of them, registered as @OctaviaBlue, has sublet her allocated floor to three separate tenants. Two other owners have also sublet units. The building now has, by MetaCelebrityNews's count, 14 people with some form of legal claim to a physical presence in Velmont Tower.

The seven lawsuits filed so far name VoxLand Realty as the primary defendant in six cases. The seventh is a preemptive suit filed by @ThalionV against @RaineKOV on the grounds that @ThalionV submitted his bid 0.3 seconds before @RaineKOV did, which he argues establishes temporal primacy. Legal analysts note that this argument has never been tested in MetaCity's property arbitration system and that the arbitration system was not designed for it. @OctaviaBlue — the owner who sublet her floor and described the situation as "honestly kind of freeing" — has not filed anything. She posted a photo of herself in the lobby on Saturday that said only "love my building." Her tenants are paying her 12,000 MetaCoins per month each. VoxLand Realty's deed registry has been locked pending manual audit. The audit has an estimated completion window of two to four weeks.

The Bottom Line

The audit has an estimated completion window of two to four weeks.

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