Next is talk about the actual Ico or token generation event section. And so every paper is going to have this section. Some actually have more data than others. One thing you tend to have for sure is the start dates and end dates. And a lot of times they're different sales like so it's broken down into private sale, presale main sale, and you want to quickly delineate that to your readers. Um, if there are instructions that need to be discussed as in which kinds of wallets or who can participate, a lot of times that's in there as well.
Generally the price in terms of aetherium and other ways to pay are included. Sometimes you notice information on whitelist as well as a bonus schedule and price increases. Let's take a look at some examples is there's a lot of ways to do this, as some of this information may sometimes have its own section. Okay, for example, Lydian has the token sale data section. Here is the issuer, which is Lydian coin is she a Singapore company, total amount of tokens, tokens to be sold via sale. So you notice that tap tokens to be provided by advisors on discretion.
So he go here, then what's left in reserve, the token name, the currencies accepted, the price per and the still the sale dates, as well as the type of token ERC 20. And there are some other options. You also have the sale structure here as you have a list of discounts and a public sale remain with the remaining amount. So you also have a funding goal, which we see is about 100 million and then they proceed to have proceeds but we'll look at let's look at another and let's look at the Legion. They have a token generation event calendar sort of table here. As you see they have the private event.
The tg event is phase, each phase A graph chart that shows you how it works. And then you go into distribution. So this is one way to do it, all the other pieces are kind of scattered. Let's take a look at another. And so rim berry has a token launch section. So they talked about their partnership with crypto, krypton hummus, which is a platform, a little bit of KYC.
And then they go into where the platform will exist, and the token sale overview. And so they have the major dates in eastern time here. It talks about the end dates, extension, possibly the value in aetherium. Exactly the number of tokens, bonuses, floors, the structure, which has a hard cap, the symbol soft cap, vesting schedule, a lot of this stuff will be separate, but in this case, it's all together. Here's the sale procedure. So you have Bitcoin aetherium, which you can use and there's a breakdown of everything here.
What's Alec how much is allocated to the sale. It's very common. If you'd be clear about this so that everyone knows how much is available, how much is up so they can know kind of what they're investing in. And they do a good job here. And then they also if you're going to have reserve talk about what the reserve is for, and this is what they do here. And so that's a good example of how to display a token sale.