I've always thought your content deserved more attention than it gets, @0xMamareza .
That's why I thought of you when I found @RallyOnChain.
What surprised me most is that account size matters far less than I expected. I've seen creative people with small followings outperform much bigger KOLs simply because their contents were better.
The feedback is what really kept me around. Every submission comes with a detailed breakdown of what worked, what didn't, and where you can improve. It genuinely feels like having a content coach review your work after every campaign.
Honestly, this feels like the thing both of us were looking for all along: a place where good ideas can actually be seen, where talent matters more than numbers, and where the work you put in can finally create real opportunities.
Honestly, a few months ago I joined my first Rally campaign just to test it out. I thought it would be like every other platform a few simple tasks and done.
But after doing a couple, I realized you can actually earn from the same kind of posts you already make every day. On top of that, you stack RLPs that feel like they’re building real value as the platform grows.
The best part is you also get a real shot at the Wingston NFT whitelist without doing anything extra.
@RallyOnChain explained it clearly in their post:
join at least 3 campaigns, hit the Top 425 on the weekly leaderboard, and follow them.
If you haven’t tried it yet, start at https://t.co/dmVF5vwmmh.
I haven’t regretted it.
I honestly didn’t expect @RallyOnChain to give out free NFT mints to the community like this.
After reading their post, it’s actually pretty straightforward.
To get whitelisted for the Wingston NFT you need to:
1. Join at least 3 campaigns
2. Rank in the Top 425 on the weekly leaderboard
3. Follow @RallyOnChain on X
That’s it.
This is the final week, so if you haven’t started yet, now’s the time. Head over to https://t.co/dmVF5vwmmh and jump into the active campaigns.
It’s nice seeing them actually reward real participation.
The story of how I killed one of my wallets still makes me laugh and cringe at the same time.
I had the seed phrase written on a small piece of paper and used it as a bookmark in a novel. After finishing the book I put it on the shelf and completely forgot about it. When I moved houses a year later, I donated a big box of books without checking. Only weeks later did I remember the seed was taped inside one of them.
That wallet is now officially dead. I have no idea which book it went with or where it ended up.
@RallyOnChain lets people tell these ridiculous but real stories.
What’s the most ridiculous way you lost a wallet?
Goodbye to the wallet whose seed phrase I wrote on a small piece of paper and taped inside the back cover of a book I was reading at the time.
The book was “The Stranger” by Camus. I finished reading it, put it on the shelf, and completely forgot the seed was there. Two years later when I moved houses, I donated a big box of books including that one. By the time I remembered, it was already gone.
Somewhere out there is a copy of The Stranger that probably has my old seed phrase taped inside it. I sometimes wonder if someone ever found it and what they did with it.
@RallyOnChain lets people share these oddly specific crypto mistakes.
What strange way did you lose or abandon a wallet?
In January I was convinced 2026 would be my “get back on track” year. I had a clear list of things I wanted to fix and improve, and I believed that with enough discipline everything would fall into place smoothly and predictably.
Reality had other plans. Some of the things I was trying to fix got worse before they got better, new problems appeared out of nowhere, and a few unexpected doors opened that completely changed my direction.
It wasn’t better or worse than I imagined. It was just completely different from the neat version I had in my head.
@RallyOnChain encourages these honest “it didn’t go as planned” stories.
What did you expect from 2026 that turned out completely different?
My 2026 drink is a glass of aged kvass that I brew from leftover bread crusts.
It looks cloudy at first and takes patience, but after a few weeks it develops a deep, sour, almost malty taste that grows on you. That’s been my year. I worked with what was left instead of waiting for something fresh and perfect to arrive. The result isn’t pretty, but it has real character and keeps getting better the longer it sits.
@RallyOnChain is refreshing because it values these kinds of unpolished stories.
What’s one drink that captures your year so far?
"A paradigm shift" is the one I’ve completely stopped believing whenever I see it.
It pops up constantly in every VC’s investment thesis thread and every new project’s pitch deck.
What it really signals: This is basically the same idea that already exists but with a slightly different twist, new branding, and a lot of buzzwords to make it sound revolutionary.
I’ve seen too many "paradigm shifts" that turned out to be minor updates or re-skinned versions of old products.
@RallyOnChain stands out to me because they encourage honest conversations instead of forcing these overused narratives.
What’s a phrase in this space that makes you roll your eyes now?
"Not financial advice" is probably the most overused disclaimer in the entire crypto space.
real meaning: I’m about to drop heavy conviction plays and price predictions, but I’m covering my ass legally in case you lose money listening to me. It’s the classic get-out-of-jail-free card everyone uses right before hyping something.
after following so many projects, I’ve learned these buzzwords usually hide the real picture.
that’s exactly why I respect @RallyOnChain they push for real conversations and honest reflections instead of the usual hype and disclaimers.
What cliché are you tired of hearing in this space?
I know that if I ended my one-year relationship right now, I’d get a lot of freedom in return.
No commitments, no responsibilities on my shoulders, and the chance to just enjoy life without any strings attached. It would feel lighter and easier in many ways.
But I’m not willing to make that trade.
Making someone happy in my life, truly loving and being loved back, has way more value than temporary fun and empty connections with people. Some things are worth staying and fighting for.
@RallyOnChain this campaign is making me reflect deeper on my real priorities.
What’s a trade you know would make life easier but you still refuse to make?
I used to work at a crypto company with a fixed monthly salary.
Even when I wasn’t making real progress in the market, that paycheck kept me comfortable.
I eventually left, and the hardest part has been not knowing if money will come in tomorrow.
But now every single day I have to fight for what I earn.
This has given me a much stronger fighter mindset, and a lot of mental ceilings I didn’t even know existed have been lifted.
@RallyOnChain thanks for pushing me to write this down and giving me extra motivation to keep going harder.
@0xMamareza@RallyOnChain i like the way this frames wingston. it’s not some guaranteed advantage, it’s more like getting positioned early inside a reputation system before everyone starts paying attention to it.
@0xMamareza the best systems usually create a loop where contribution builds reputation, reputation improves access, access creates more value, and the protocol captures part of that flow