Overview
House of Titans is a passive-income platform that lets people pool money into real-world infrastructure like Bitcoin mining and earn a share of the returns. Holders lock up the project's TITAN token to collect rewards drawn from a spread of investments the project runs on their behalf. What sets it apart is the mix: instead of a single yield source, it bundles Bitcoin mining rigs, decentralized storage nodes, and mobile-network hardware into one holding1.
Built on Cardano, House of Titans calls itself a DePIN aggregator, short for decentralized physical infrastructure networks, the umbrella term for projects that pay people to help run physical hardware such as miners, storage, or wireless nodes. The team pools funds raised through the TITAN token and its NFT collections, buys into these networks, and passes a portion of the income back to holders1.
Key Features
- One holding, many income streams. The project spreads its money across Bitcoin mining, Iagon storage nodes, World Mobile network hardware, and GPU compute, so returns do not depend on any single source2.
- Rewards paid in the underlying asset. When an investment earns tokens such as Iagon's IAG, holders receive a share of those same tokens rather than a fixed rate, tying payouts directly to how the investments perform3.
- A published split of the income. The project's documentation states that of the income generated, 60 percent goes to holders who lock their TITAN, 25 percent to the treasury, and 15 percent to running costs3.
- Tokens stay in your wallet. Locking TITAN to earn rewards is non-custodial, meaning the tokens never leave the holder's own wallet, and a periodic snapshot records each wallet's share3.
- NFTs tied to the same revenue. The project's Stronghold NFTs pay out ADA based on points that build up from mining and other activity, linking the collectibles to the underlying earnings4.
What to Expect
A visitor lands on a marketing site that leads to a separate rewards app, where the TITAN token can be locked to start earning. The passive income arrives as tokens from the project's holdings, so the amount and asset vary with how those investments perform rather than following a fixed rate. Anyone weighing the project should know two things. First, no independent security audit of the platform was identified, and there is no public code repository2. Second, the NFT "staking" is a colloquial label: by the project's own product lead, it is an off-chain points system rather than an on-chain smart contract, so it behaves more like a loyalty program than blockchain staking4. The team behind House of Titans is named publicly, led by a stated chief executive, and the project publishes a whitepaper covering its token, its investments, and how rewards are shared5.
