Crypto used to feel like an infinite airdrop glitch.
Farm.
Bridge.
Swap.
Wait.
Now it’s less about farming protocols…
and more about farming relevance.
Change is constant but crypto is the edge..
#crypto
Base has 7M+ users.
Most of them are still spot trading memes.
What if there's a whole new way to trade on @Base and maximize more profits!?
Here's the trick.👇🧵
Why buying booster packs NOW in Grand Arena(@Moku_HQ )matters more than you think.🌟
$1M prize pool. 24/7 AI battles. Cards that determine EVERYTHING.
Here's what early buyers understand that others don't
🧵👇
So since I'm new to Grand Arena (@Moku_HQ ) I haven't had the opportunity to use Boosters and Card Packs yet, but that’s all about to change! 🌟
The phase for card packs and boosters is going live today and I can't wait to see what cards I can grab. This is our first real shot at buying packs using Gems to build out a collection.
I’m mostly hunting for those rare Scheme Cards, but the Champion Cards look sick too. It’s simple to get started—just log in, link your wallets, and you’re ready to go.
The best part is definitely the opening process. You get five cards at once, and if the pull is weak, you can reroll the whole pack up to five times to try for something better.
Once you have your cards, you can even use the crafting system to trade in your duplicates for higher rarities like Epics and Legendaries. It’s a great way to keep upgrading your deck as you go.
Everything we do also builds up mXP, which is the key to getting a piece of that $1M prize pool for Season 1.
You can track your progress and estimated earnings right in your account dashboard. It’s officially time to stop waiting and start opening some packs.
Let's see what everyone pulls today!
#GrandArena #Moku #Web3Gaming #Ronin #Base #TGAT69
Just learned about Grand Arena (@Moku_HQ ) and I’ll be documenting my journey — today is Day 1.
And i can’t wait to start the preseason!
Apparently there are lots of perks in the arena to play with, and the competition looks intense.
To get started, I needed a Moki — and now my Moki competes daily against other players’ Mokis.
Your strength in Grand Arena comes down to how well you train and prepare your Moki, so keeping them ready is key.
Here are some of the perks I’ve found so far:
➔ To compete better, you need to train your Moki and craft your own strategy.
➔Moki stats matter — different skills and attributes affect performance.
➔Daily competitions help you climb the ranks and earn rewards.
➔Preseason preparation gives you a head start before the official season begins.
➔ You can adapt your strategy depending on your opponent’s strengths and weaknesses.
➔ Arena placement and timing** can influence match outcomes.
➔ Community guides and tips online help you optimize training and choice of moves.
I’ll be documenting progress, wins, losses, and what I learn along the way — starting here on Day 1.
Let’s go! 🔥
Meme coins on @Base are about to run for a simple reason:
📍 distribution > hype.
Low fees, fast settlement, creator coins, social-native launches, and culture forming on-chain. Memes aren’t just pumping — they’re being born where attention lives.
This is how trends start, and only Based mates will get in. 🟦
Meme coins on @Base are about to run for a simple reason:
📍 distribution > hype.
Low fees, fast settlement, creator coins, social-native launches, and culture forming on-chain. Memes aren’t just pumping — they’re being born where attention lives.
This is how trends start, and only Based mates will get in. 🟦
It’s important to reiterate that the Open World preview that went live on December 19 isn’t meant to feel like a full launch.
What @WilderWorld is doing with Wiami feels intentional. There’s no rush to open the doors to everyone at once. Instead, this phase is about making sure the foundation is strong before anything larger is added.
The attention right now is on the core systems that make a world believable — NPC behavior, traffic movement, mission flow, and how driving, combat, and exploration connect during play. These are the elements that determine whether an open world holds together long-term, and it’s clear the team is taking time to refine them.
Rolling the world out in stages supports that goal. Limited access helps maintain stability and gives the developers room to observe real gameplay, identify issues, and improve the experience before scaling.
Wiami doesn’t come across as a static environment or a rushed content drop. It feels like a city being assembled carefully, one layer at a time. That level of patience is uncommon, and it’s what makes this approach stand out.
I’ve been thinking about what this Open World Preview actually signals, beyond the surface-level excitement.
What’s unfolding with @WilderWorld and Wiami doesn’t follow the usual playbook. This isn’t a polished reveal meant to impress from a distance. It’s an early exposure of the city itself — systems and all — placed in the hands of a limited group so the world can be tested under real conditions. Missions, movement, traffic, interiors, NPCs, vehicles — everything is allowed to function as it is, not as it’s marketed.
Labeling this phase a preview matters. It sets expectations correctly. This isn’t scale-first or audience-first. Access is deliberate, rollout is gradual, and player behavior is being observed just as closely as performance metrics. It highlights an important truth: believable open worlds are shaped by how people actually use them, not by how big they appear on day one.
The way access is being handled reinforces that idea. Entry isn’t based on noise or reach, but on consistency. Long-standing Wilders and deeply engaged community members are being prioritized because they’ve invested time, feedback, and effort into the ecosystem. Even newer contributors who’ve shown real commitment are being brought in. That choice signals that this phase is built on participation, not promotion.
The most compelling part, to me, is the staged growth. By expanding Wiami gradually, the city is given space to find its identity. Systems can settle, weak points can surface early, and improvements can be made before scale amplifies the problems. It’s a slower strategy, but one that favors longevity over shortcuts.
For players and creators, this moment is uncommon. It’s not just about experiencing a world — it’s about helping shape it while it’s still malleable. Presence matters. Feedback matters. Engagement has weight.
Wiami isn’t arriving as a completed destination.
It’s being introduced as a living framework, still forming.
And starting there feels intentional — and necessary.
Lately, I’ve been paying closer attention to how @WilderWorld is re-entering the conversation, and it feels less like a comeback and more like a recalibration.
What’s happening with the Open World isn’t a loud reveal or a hype-driven launch. It’s a gradual build. Wiami is being introduced the way complex systems should be: in layers, with intention.
The preview doesn’t try to impress by showing everything. Instead, it lets you experience the city in motion. You drive through it. You take on missions. You move through interiors, deal with traffic, and interact with NPCs that exist as part of the environment rather than background props. Combat, exploration, and movement feel interconnected, giving a sense of flow without pushing the systems too far too fast.
What stands out most is the patience behind the design. This phase isn’t about scale — it’s about validation. Core mechanics like stability, mission structure, vehicle handling, and NPC behavior are being tested where they can be observed, adjusted, and improved in real time.
Keeping the playable area limited is a deliberate choice, not a constraint. It creates room for focused feedback and allows the team to fix issues early, before expansion introduces unnecessary complexity.
A lot of projects talk about building open worlds. Fewer treat them like living frameworks that need time to mature. This rollout suggests a willingness to prioritize long-term quality over short-term attention.
The preview is small by design, but purposeful. It’s meant to be studied, stress-tested, and refined — not just consumed.
That level of restraint is rare, and it’s why this approach feels worth watching.
I shared the Open World preview from @WilderWorld because what’s unfolding here isn’t spectacle. It’s structure, process, and the early foundation of something that could genuinely evolve.
One thing I can’t ignore: @WilderWorld is still getting real attention on CT, even while GameFi has cooled off hard.
Strip away the market noise and most on-chain games feel rushed or unfinished. This one doesn’t. The build quality actually shows intent, not hype.
I’m unsure when (or if) blockchain gaming becomes the dominant meta again.
But if it does, it’ll be driven by worlds that prioritize visuals, flow, and player experience first — and this feels closer to that direction than most.
@WilderWorld is singlehandedly making Gamefi great again✌️
Something subtle but important is happening with the @WilderWorld open world rollout.
This isn’t a polished “final product” moment — it’s an intentional first phase. A live test. A city designed to listen before it performs.
By rolling out in stages, systems get to fail, adapt, and grow in public. Missions evolve. NPCs learn. The world responds to real players, not trailers.
What stands out isn’t the content, but the process. Not the promise, but the structure.
If Wiami continues to grow through iteration and community input, players won’t just explore it — they’ll shape it.
It doesn’t feel like a game launch.
It feels like the foundation of a living world.
@WilderWorld
Merry Christmas X-fam 🎄
Obviously we’ve had a wholesome day, and now it’s time for games. Here’s what should definitely tickle your fancy…
💫 The Wilder World Open World preview is officially live! 💫
This first Open World preview isn’t a full release — it’s a focused test phase built to check what really matters: stability, mission flow, NPC behavior, vehicle systems, and early city features. Real gameplay, real testing.
Access isn’t random either. Testers are being carefully selected from Wilders who’ve been around from the start, alongside newer community members who’ve stayed active, engaged, and supportive of the project.
Wondering how to get in?
✨ You can join the **waitlist** — I’ll drop the link in the comments.
Around 250 Wilders will be invited, with access rolled out in waves of about 50 testers at a time. This helps the team monitor performance, gather proper feedback, and improve the experience before expanding further.
If you love gaming and well-built worlds, Wiami is definitely one to keep your eyes on. 🎮
@WilderWorld