π Reactor Academy: Wallet vs. DeFi Neobank
Most crypto wallets solve one problem: storage.
They hold assets, display balances and let users sign transactions.
But once you need to swap assets, move between chains, access liquidity or manage positions, the workflow usually moves somewhere else.
Thatβs why many DeFi users end up juggling multiple apps, browser tabs and interfaces.
A DeFi neobank takes a different approach.
Instead of acting as a storage tool, it becomes the place where more of the workflow happens directly.
Portfolio management, cross-chain activity and asset routing remain inside the same environment.
The goal isnβt just holding assets. Itβs making them easier to use.
The Reactor Mobile App is now available in Android Open Testing.
π Download on Google Play: https://t.co/VZiEe5SGk6
@samrags_ Bullish for $REACT - a deterministic layer for autonomous AI agents to roam without limits, safely in an open source, trusted, and verified crosschain reactive smart contract landscape. Vaulted protection, atmospheric potential. Asymmetrical return is probable. NFA. β‘π¦βπ₯π
@CoinbaseDev The future of crosschain settlement needs a deterministic layer to police dAI. $REACT was created for this exact function
Billions coded π¦βπ₯
Hyper bullish on @base - anything @coinbase touches right now is gold. What lies beneath makes all the difference.
$REACT accordingly
Any blockchain worth it's weight in bytes can be verified, audited, and has plenty of documentation to back it up. πΎ
@0xReactive gets a lot of flack and FUD but once you DYOR - you understand what lies beneath. There's nothing else like it in this space. π―
$REACT or ___ π¦βπ₯
Never stop building.
$REACT πβ‘
Regarding Omnifork Mainnet Upgrade;
CometBFT is the direct descendant of Tendermint Core, a consensus algorithm that Jae Kwon began designing in 2014, before Ethereum even launched. The idea was to take decades of academic research on Byzantine fault tolerance (BFT) ($XRP was built using this mechanism) and turn it into a practical blockchain consensus protocol. "Byzantine fault" sounds intimidating, but the concept is simple: a participant that doesn't just crash, but actively misbehaves, sending contradictory messages, proposing invalid data, or trying to manipulate the outcome. CometBFT keeps the network safe as long as fewer than one-third of validators are acting this way.
In 2023, the project was forked from Tendermint Core and relaunched as CometBFT, maintained by Informal Systems. Along with the rename came meaningful protocol upgrades, including ABCI++ (more on this shortly) and improved developer tooling.
KWYH π―π