@kava Front desk or EVM, but the royalties go through IBC that night.
The NFT market "Floating Lantern" decided to clear the noise of off-chain reconciliation at once. On the user side, all minting, listing, and signing still follow the EVM process with familiar wallet pop-ups; on the back end, the team migrated royalty distribution to Kava's Cosmos Co-Chain, accounts are mapped by Translator, and cross-domain payments go through IBC.
In the first week after launch, they changed the settlement dashboard to three lines: EVM matching batch hash, IBC transaction height, and receipt of funds. Creators can directly click on the "path" of each distribution in the back end, P50 receipt in 7 minutes, P95 in 14 minutes; the previously most annoying ticket of "Has it been sent?" dropped from 420 tickets to 180 tickets. At the end of the financial cycle, finance only pulled a single-caliber report of "matching - distribution - receipt", no longer needing to piece together Excel.
The key changes appeared in the second month: they made the tax rate and reserve in the European region adjustable parameters, and Translator automatically distributed them to the corresponding treasury, without the need for "re-audit" upon release.
In the compliance meeting, legal for the first time reviewed "receipt delay distribution, failure retry rate, reconciliation cycle" as SLOs, and interoperability was no longer cross-chain teaching but a part of the experience.
The conclusion of the review is simple: @kava shifted complexity to the protocol layer, saving both organizational costs and user patience.