Company: DKI
Filing Date: 2025-08-11
Form Type: 424B4
Source: 0001641172-25-022921
Chunk: 175

Company: DarkIris Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-08-11
Form: 424B4
Chunk 175
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 any of its securities;                                                                     |

| ● | may                                                                           
 not issue negotiable or bearer shares but may issue shares with no par value; |

| ● | may                                                                                        
 obtain an undertaking against the imposition of any future taxation (such undertakings are 
 usually given for 20 years in the first instance);                                         |

| ● | may register by way of continuation                                
 in another jurisdiction and be deregistered in the Cayman Islands; |

| ● | may register as an exempted   
 limited duration company; and |

| ● | may register as a segregated 
 portfolio company.           |

“Limited liability” means that the liability of each shareholder is limited to the amount unpaid by the shareholder on the shares of the company (except in exceptional circumstances, such as involving fraud, the establishment of an agency relationship or an illegal or improper purpose or other circumstances in which a court may be prepared to pierce or lift the corporate veil).

Differences in Corporate Law

The Companies Act is modeled, to a large extent, after the older Companies Acts of England but does not follow recent English statutory enactments and, accordingly, there are significant differences between the Companies Act and the current Companies Act of England. In addition, the Companies Act differs from laws applicable to U.S. corporations and their shareholders. Set forth below is a summary of certain significant differences between the provisions of the Companies Act applicable to us and the laws applicable to companies incorporated in the United States and their shareholders.

Mergers and Similar Arrangements. The Companies Act permits mergers and consolidations between two or more constituent Cayman Islands companies and between Cayman Islands companies and non-Cayman Islands companies provided that the laws of the foreign jurisdiction permit such merger or consolidation. For these purposes, (i) “merger” means the merging of two or more constituent companies and the vesting of their undertaking, property, and liabilities in one of such companies as the surviving company, and (ii) a “consolidation” means the combination of two or more constituent companies into a new consolidated company and the vesting of the undertaking, property, and liabilities of such companies to the consolidated company. In order to effect such a merger or consolidation, the directors of each constituent company must approve a written plan of merger or consolidation, which must then be authorized by (a) a special resolution of the shareholders of each constituent company, and (b) such other authorization, if any, as may be specified in such constituent company’s articles of association. The written plan of merger