Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Based on content crawled from basehome.net, this project focuses on the real-world adoption of the Japanese yen stablecoin JPYC and appears to have two business lines: JPYC Connect and Stickr. The former is more B2B-oriented, offering companies consulting for JPYC implementation, KYC and operational support, merchant acquisition, and solution design for use cases such as BtoB payments, cross-border remittances, and compensation payouts. The latter is an NFC sticker-based wearable payment product designed for fast cashless payments at offline venues such as events, live performances, doujin markets, nightlife venues, and Web3 conferences.
In terms of platform type, it is not a cryptocurrency exchange, nor is it a typical wallet. It is better understood as stablecoin payment infrastructure combined with scenario-specific payment products. As for supported assets, the text only explicitly mentions JPYC and does not specify supported public chains, wallet standards, or trading pairs, so it should not be interpreted as a trading or order-matching platform. Regarding KYC, the page mentions KYC and operational support for businesses, but does not disclose specific review standards for merchants or end users. Key information such as security measures, cold wallets, insurance, compliance licenses, and fund custody is not provided and would require further due diligence.
The page does not disclose its pricing model, transaction fees, SLA pricing, or the cost of Stickr devices/stickers. Although it mentions enterprise SLAs and implementation plans that make use of subsidies, there is no quantified pricing. Companies evaluating the service should therefore ask specifically about setup fees, transaction fees, settlement cycles, refund/dispute handling costs, and who bears JPYC conversion and on-chain transaction fees.
Its main strength is clear positioning: it aims to move JPYC from a “stablecoin that can be held” to a “payment tool that can be used,” while covering both enterprise implementation and offline physical UX. The NFC sticker turns the payment entry point into a physical object, making it suitable for high-frequency, short-duration, crowded event scenarios. The drawbacks are the lack of public information, especially around compliance, risk control, security, technical compatibility, and fee transparency. It also does not provide spot, margin, or derivatives trading capabilities, so it is not suitable for trading-oriented users.
It is better suited to Japan-based businesses or organizations targeting the Japanese market, including event organizers, Web3 conferences, doujin events, and operators of offline consumption scenarios that want to test JPYC payments, compensation payouts, or cross-border settlement. Access from China is unclear. At the payment layer, usability may be affected by JPYC acquisition channels, local regulation, wallet availability, and fiat on/off-ramp restrictions. If you need stablecoin trading or a global payment alternative, it may be worth comparing USDC enterprise payments, Stripe Crypto, or traditional cashless payment systems for events.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on basehome.net official site.
basehome.net is an Japan Crypto provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach basehome.net directly.