Over half a million new tokens launched in the first two months of this year, and most are already worthless.
That's the market doing its job, clearing the noise so the few projects built with a real purpose have room to matter.
Over half a million tokens launched in two months and most are already gone. That's a filter.
What's left standing afterward is the stuff that was actually built to do something.
Regulation arriving isn't the end of crypto's wild era. It's the part where it stops being a hobby and starts being something your government, your bank, and your grandmother can all use.
Building something real is mostly long stretches of unglamorous work between the moments anyone sees. The version on the timeline is the highlight reel.
The actual job is showing up on the quiet days.
We have more young, capable, connected people than at any point in human history. All that potential is sitting right there, waiting on nothing but the tools and the access to use it.
I’m interested in long-term stability, not short-term excitement.
When financial systems reward reliability and cooperation, entire economies become more resilient.
There are two versions of crypto's future:
One where a handful of exchanges and VC-backed chains own everything, set the fees, and decide who gets access.
One where the infrastructure is open, the mining is decentralized, and the people using it actually own what they hold.
We're building the second one.
Bitcoin mining is moving to stranded energy. Hydro in Paraguay. Geothermal in Iceland. Flared gas in Texas.
Using power that had no buyer anyway.
The narrative that crypto inherently wastes energy is three years out of date.
People often ask why regulation, compliance, and security matter so much.
Because the goal isn’t to impress insiders. It’s to build something normal people can rely on.
"What does your company do?"
We make it easier for people to trade with each other across borders.
"Oh so like crypto?"
No. Like commerce. Crypto is just the engine. Trade is the point.