At first, I thought Battle Coin Arena was just another crypto battle platform. Then I noticed something most projects rarely talk about: Trust.
After reading their whitepaper, BCA isn't just solving a gaming problem. It's solving a credibility problem. 🧵👇
BCA THREAD CONTEST ALERT 🚨
BCA is launching a $300 educational thread contest for creators across the Web3 ecosystem.
Rewards:
🥇 1st Place — $120
🥈 2nd Place — $70
🥉 3rd Place — $50
🏅 4th Place — $30
🏅 5th Place — $30
📌 Requirements:
• Write ONE original educational thread about @battlecoinarena
• Follow @battlecoinarena , @tomzy_meta and @Anorld58644
• Register on https://t.co/qw9KUQyJkl
• Like + repost
• Tag 3 creators
• Quote the announcement post with your thread entry
📖 What They’re Looking For:
• Clarity
• Originality
• Educational value
• Strong storytelling
⏰ Deadline: June 7, 2026
Good luck 🤞
harga barang yang berpotensi naik,
efek 1 $USD = Rp.18.000
tapi tenang sobat, tidak akan ada demo. selama bbm tdk di naikkan harganya. @prabowo tau banget soal ini.
1). Mi instan
2). Tahu dan tempe
3). Tepung terigu
4). Roti dan kue
5). Smartphone / Handphone
6). Laptop dan komputer
7). Komponen PC (seperti RAM, kartu grafis/VGA, dan prosesor)
8). Daging ayam potong
9). Telur ayam ras
10). Obat-obatan (baik generik maupun obat paten)
11). Suplemen dan vitamin impor
12). Alat kesehatan (seperti masker medis, alat cek darah, dan perban)
13). Suku cadang (*spare parts*) mobil dan sepeda motor
14). Mobil dan sepeda motor baru
15). Bahan Bakar Minyak (BBM) non-subsidi (Pertamax, Pertamax Turbo, Dexlite, Pertamina Dex)
16). Susu formula anak (yang menggunakan bahan baku bubuk susu impor)
17). Produk kosmetik dan perawatan kulit (skincare) merek luar negeri
18). Barang elektronik rumah tangga (Televisi, AC, Kulkas, Mesin Cuci)
19). Pakaian, sepatu, dan tas bermerek impor
20). Daging sapi impor (*frozen beef*)
21). Bawang putih (karena mayoritas pasokan nasional masih diimpor)
22). Buah-buahan impor (seperti apel, anggur, pir, dan kurma)
23). Gula pasir (sebagian besar bahan baku gula mentah/rafinasi didatangkan dari luar negeri)
24). Gas LPG non-subsidi (Bright Gas 5,5 kg dan 12 kg)
25). Keju, mentega (*butter*), dan krim olahan susu impor
26). Konsol game (PlayStation, Nintendo Switch, Xbox)
27). Kamera digital dan lensa fotografi
28). Smart TV dan Android TV
29). Perangkat audio (Speaker bluetooth, *headphone*, dan *earbuds* nirkabel)
30). Powerbank dan aksesori pengisi daya (charger serta kabel data)
31). Oli dan pelumas mesin kendaraan (bahan dasar *base oil* menggunakan standar harga global)
32). Ban kendaraan bermotor (menggunakan komponen kimia pengolah karet impor)
33). Aki kendaraan (battery mobil dan motor)
34). Pupuk kimia non-subsidi (bahan baku fosfat dan kalium sepenuhnya diimpor)
35). Biji plastik (bahan baku utama pembuatan botol, kantong, dan wadah kemasan industri)
36). Kertas fotokopi dan kertas cetak (harga bubur kertas/pulp terikat harga komoditas global)
37). Besi beton dan baja ringan untuk konstruksi pembangunan
38). Cat tembok dan cat industri (menggunakan pigmen dan bahan kimia inti impor)
39). Sepatu olahraga merek global (seperti Nike, Adidas, Puma, dll.)
40). Parfum original merek luar negeri
41). Pakaian dan jaket dari lini mode internasional (fast fashion retail)
42). Mainan anak bermerek impor (seperti Lego, diecast Hot Wheels, dan action figure)
43). Alat musik modern (Gitar listrik, keyboard, piano digital, dan drum elektrik)
44). Alat olahraga impor (Raket badminton/tenis, sepeda, dan peralatan gym)
45). Pakan kucing dan anjing (pet food) merek internasional
46). Susu kedelai kemasan pabrikan
47). Cokelat batangan dan produk berbasis kakao olahan dari luar negeri
48). Saus dan bumbu masakan kemasan impor (seperti saus pasta instan, kecap Jepang, dan mayones)
49). Suplemen kebugaran (seperti whey protein, kreatin, dan susu diet impor)
50). Tiket pesawat terbang rute internasional (karena biaya avtur global dan sewa pesawat menggunakan mata uang USD)
Tenang, walau 1 dollar skrng udah 18.000
Itu artinya rupiah lagi dilemahin, biar ekspor josss, toh beli tempe goreng masih pake rupiah. Ga pake dolar.
Amanlah.
Itu buktinya ibox, resto mewah, event2 fashion tetep rame.
Ini ulah mata2 asing yg buat gaduh.
Jaya jaya jaya
While some people are complaining about rising prices, others are quietly smiling.
The reason is the same: a stronger U.S. dollar.
For a freelancer paid in dollars, this month's income suddenly feels bigger without working any extra hours. The amount of dollars received hasn't changed, but when converted into Indonesian rupiah, it's worth significantly more.
On the other hand, a student planning to buy a new laptop may have to postpone the purchase. The device they were saving for a few months ago now costs much more because many of its components are imported.
This is why a stronger dollar creates two very different stories.
For exporters, remote workers, and those earning income from abroad, a rising dollar can be a welcome advantage. But for most people who earn and spend in rupiah, it often means higher costs for everyday goods and services.
In the end, when exchange rates move, it's not just numbers on a financial chart that change. It's the daily decisions of millions of people—whether to delay a purchase, cut back on spending, or find new ways to keep up with the rising cost of living.
Because for most people, the dollar exchange rate isn't just an economic statistic. It's something they eventually feel in their own wallets.
#Economy #Finance #USD #Rupiah #Inflation
Dlicom: The Quiet Architecture of a New Internet — Where SocialFi, AI, and Self-Custody Finally Meet on Base
A long-form look at how Dlicom is rebuilding social communication for the on-chain era.
A new signal in a noisy world
Every decade or so, the internet rearranges itself. The early web gave us pages. Web2 gave us platforms. Each shift quietly redefined who owns the conversation — and who profits from it.
We are now standing inside the next rearrangement, and it doesn't look like another app store launch or a louder feed. It looks like a fundamental rewrite of the relationship between users, creators, and the platforms they live on. Identity is becoming portable. Wallets are becoming social. Messages are becoming assets. AI is becoming a co-pilot, not a surveillance layer.
In the middle of this shift, a project called Dlicom is building something that feels less like a product and more like a thesis: that social, financial, and AI experiences should live in one self-custodied space, owned by the people who use it.
This is the story of that thesis and why it matters.
extracting from it.
The result is a platform where opening a chat, watching a clip, joining a community, or tipping a creator are all parts of the same continuous on-chain motion no app-switching, no broken context, no custodial middleman holding the keys.
Inside the Dlicom ecosystem
Dlicom isn’t a single feature dressed up as a platform. It’s a small ecosystem with several connected surfaces, each designed to remove a friction point from on-chain life.
Self-custody wallet at the core
Everything in Dlicom starts at the wallet. It's a non-custodial wallet, meaning the keys live with the user — not on a company's server. From this single wallet, users can hold assets, sign transactions, interact with dApps, stake, and authenticate across the rest of the Dlicom experience.
The wallet isn't a separate tab to remember. It's the identity layer behind every action: every chat, every clip, every post.
2. Encrypted messaging
Private conversations on Dlicom are designed around end-to-end encryption, not metadata harvesting. The point isn't only privacy in the abstract — it's that chat becomes a financial surface. Once a conversation is encrypted and tied to a self-custody wallet, in-chat transactions stop feeling like a bolt-on and start feeling like the natural shape of messaging.
You can talk to a friend, send them tokens, split a payment, or settle a creator tip — all inside the same encrypted thread, without exposing keys or routing through a third party.
3. The Web3 browser
A native Web3 browser turns Dlicom into more than a single app — it becomes a doorway to the wider on-chain world. Users can explore decentralized applications, connect to protocols, and interact with smart contracts using the same wallet identity they already have inside Dlicom.
This matters because Web3's biggest UX failure is fragmentation. Wallets, browsers, dApps, and chats rarely speak the same language. Dlicom's browser collapses those layers into one continuous session.
4. DliClips short-form video, on-chain native
DliClips is Dlicom's short-form video layer — the cultural front door of the platform. If TikTok and Reels showed how powerful vertical video can be, DliClips reframes that format under a different economic logic.
Creators on DliClips own their content and their audience. Engagement isn't just a vanity metric flowing into a platform's ad business; it's a signal that can be tied directly to creator rewards, community participation, and on-chain reputation. The format is familiar. The ownership model is not.
5. SocialFi-native feed and communities
Around the wallet, chat, browser, and clips sits the social layer: feeds, communities, and creator spaces designed for participation, not extraction. Posting, commenting, and following are not just engagement loops they are the substrate for a healthier creator economy where attention is rewarded transparently.
@printrintrn One hand. One chance. One new path.
I was stuck at rock bottom. Then I found PRINTRN.
Sometimes all it takes is one opportunity to change everything.
Interns Unite. 🫡
$PRINTRN #PRINTRN