Something important just changed with the @Nasun_io Genesis Pass drop
and it actually makes things more interesting.
First, mint is no longer happening on OpenSea.
It’s now on their own site.
Cleaner experience, less friction…
and the fees saved are being redirected to reward the top 100 on the leaderboard.
Nice touch.
Dates also got shifted by one day, so here’s how it now plays out:
Free mint kicks off April 7.
Then allowlists on April 8.
Public mint opens April 9.
Everything wraps up April 14.
But the bigger shift isn’t even the dates.
It’s how supply works.
There’s no fixed number anymore
mint is time-based.
Once the window closes, that’s the final supply.
So allowlists aren’t about “access” now…
They’re about price advantage.
Early = cheaper
Late = higher
GTD gets the lowest entry,
FCFS comes next, and once public opens, everyone’s minting at the highest price.
If you’re FCFS, that window matters.
Miss it, and you’re paying more for the same thing.
Also worth noting;
FCFS allowlist closes April 8.
If you haven’t registered yet, now’s the time.
That’s basically a 33% discount vs public.
And if you already registered, go check your status
it’s been updated.
Overall, this update shifts things from
“who gets in” to “who moves early.”
If you’ve been watching @Nasun_io
this is one of those moments you don’t want to be late to.
Mint / register ↓
https://t.co/A7Aub6Airb
Just registered for @Nasun_io first airdrop
And completed my daily tasks
I can’t seem to buy scratch card using my Pc
But it works perfectly well on my mobile device
Is that the setting or I’m missing something @Naru010110
Anyways, remember to register for the airdrop, Mint free Alliance NFT, and complete your daily tasks.
Registration closes April 8
Airdrop on April 16
Here’s my wallet address
0x35de0bf46089e82c8b25794788ec45d5a3f4fe4285441ff669b11d47c238ed8d
Send in some tokens to complete tasks
Also, drop your address in the comment section for some tokens.
DeFi has never lacked capability.
You can trade, lend, earn yield, take leverage
all onchain.
But using it never really feels… complete.
Because behind all that power, everything is still split.
Your capital sits in different places.
Your positions live in different systems.
Your decisions happen somewhere else entirely.
So even when you’re active, your capital isn’t.
It’s scattered.
The problem isn’t what DeFi can do.
It’s how everything is separated.
Each action forces a choice
where to move funds, what to lock,
how to manage risk across multiple platforms that don’t speak to each other.
And while all of this is happening,
the most important part "context"
lives outside the system.
You’re reading markets on one screen,
discussing on another, and executing somewhere else.
Nothing is connected.
Built on @Nasun_io Pado takes a different approach.
Instead of building another product on top of this structure, it restructures the experience itself.
One account.
One system.
One continuous flow of capital.
No switching between protocols.
No splitting balances.
No locking funds into isolated use cases.
Just a single financial state that moves with you.
What changes with this model isn’t just convenience.
It’s how your capital behaves.
Instead of sitting idle in separate pools, your balance becomes continuous
available, reusable, and always in motion.
The same capital can support multiple actions without being split or reassigned every time.
You’re no longer managing pieces of a portfolio across different systems.
You’re operating from one.
That shift sounds simple.
But it changes everything.
Because once capital stops being fragmented,
the system starts to feel less like a collection of tools…
…and more like actual finance.
DeFi didn’t need more features.
It needed coordination.
Pado starts there.
In practice, it looks like this: ⏬
Been a while since I posted about @River4fun
but I’ve still been keeping up.
$RIVER is now live on @StargateFinance,
so you can move it across Ethereum, Base, and BNB Chain.
Also,
@RiverdotInc Sessions at EthCC is happening in a few days
private one in Cannes.
Check out the @RiverdotInc page for update.
Let’s see how this plays out.
In the last piece, I left off with a simple question:
How does a system like this actually work?
Not in theory, but in practice.
How value moves. How coordination happens.
How everything stays connected without breaking down.
This is where Nasun becomes more than just an idea.
Handling transactions is no longer the challenge.
What’s difficult now is supporting systems
where multiple actors, assets, and processes interact continuously.
AI agents coordinating decisions.
Games running persistent economies.
Financial systems involving multiple parties at once.
This is where traditional architectures start to break.
@Nasun_io approaches this differently.
Instead of separating infrastructure, execution, and applications,
it connects them into a single coordinated stack:
➤ A protocol layer that handles ownership and settlement
➤ An infrastructure layer that powers execution
➤ An application layer where real interactions happen
Individually, these layers have always existed
but they’ve never worked together without friction at scale.
Applications on Nasun don’t operate in isolation.
They generate activity that moves through the system:
➤ Infrastructure executes it
➤ The protocol secures and settles it
➤ Value flows back into the network
For example,
imagine a game asset being traded between players:
the application triggers the interaction,
infrastructure executes the exchange in real time,
the protocol finalizes ownership,
and the value generated flows back into both the game and the network.
What you get isn’t a one-way process, but a loop:
activity → execution → settlement → value → back into the system
That loop is what allows Nasun to function as more than a transaction layer.
When applications generate revenue, it flows to:
➛ The projects building on the network
➛ The ecosystem treasury
From there, $NSN holders govern how that value is allocated.
Not extracted.
Not distributed as short-term rewards.
But reinvested into:
➛ Product development
➛ Ecosystem growth
➛ Network-wide initiatives
It’s a model designed for long-term sustainability.
This is where the design starts to matter.
Nasun supports systems that require continuous interaction,
not just isolated transactions:
➤ Persistent assets across games, AI models, and platforms
➤ Programmable ownership with built-in royalties and splits
➤ High-frequency microtransactions
➤ Parallel execution without global bottlenecks
These aren’t extras.
They’re what make coordination at scale possible.
Different types of builders benefit from this structure:
𝗖𝗿𝗲𝗮𝘁𝗼𝗿𝘀 monetize directly through programmable ownership.
𝗚𝗮𝗺𝗲𝘀 sustain economies that persist across worlds.
𝗔𝗜 systems coordinate agents with attributable compute.
𝗙𝗶𝗻𝗮𝗻𝗰𝗲 enables capital to move across multiple parties at once.
Different use cases.
Same underlying need:
coordination at scale.
@Nasun_io is built on Move
a resource-oriented language designed for secure, explicit ownership.
Combined with:
➤ Mysticeti consensus for fast finality
➤ Delegated Proof-of-Stake for efficient validation
➤ Object-centric execution for parallel processing
The result isn’t just a system that processes transactions faster
it’s one that keeps complex systems running without breaking coordination as they scale.
Most blockchains don’t have a usage problem.
They have a value problem.
Applications get built. Users show up. Activity happens.
But the value? It doesn’t stay.
It leaks
across layers, across platforms, across ecosystems that were never designed to work as one.
What we’ve built so far are networks.
Functional, scalable, even impressive.
But not coordinated.
Not economies.
That’s the gap @Nasun_io is stepping into.
Not as just another Layer-1 competing on speed or fees,
but as infrastructure designed to align everything happening on top of it.
Built on Move,
Nasun brings together three high-growth verticals
𝗙𝗶𝗻𝗮𝗻𝗰𝗲, 𝗔𝗜, and 𝗘𝗻𝘁𝗲𝗿𝘁𝗮𝗶𝗻𝗺𝗲𝗻𝘁
into a single system where value isn’t just created,
but retained and coordinated.
And instead of stopping at the base layer, it extends upward
integrating the applications themselves into the network’s core design.
Most blockchains stop at infrastructure.
They provide blockspace, execution, and settlement
and leave everything else to external builders.
Nasun doesn’t.
It integrates protocol, infrastructure, and applications into one system.
Not as separate layers operating
independently,
but as parts of a coordinated whole.
The result is simple:
Value doesn’t just pass through the network
it stays within it.
This isn’t theoretical.
Nasun already has three live platforms shaping its ecosystem:
⇨ 𝗣𝗮𝗱𝗼 — a full-featured DeFi layer
⇨ 𝗚𝗲𝗻𝗦𝗼𝗹— a cinematic sci-fi universe across games, animation, and film
⇨ 𝗕𝗮𝗿𝗮𝗺 — on-chain coordination for AI agents
Each operates in a different vertical
finance, culture, and intelligence.
But together, they create something more interesting:
A system where capital, content, and computation
exist inside the same environment.
The shift is already happening.
AI systems are becoming more autonomous.
Digital economies are expanding beyond finance.
Users are no longer just transacting
they’re participating.
What’s missing is infrastructure that can coordinate all of it in one place.
Nasun is building into that gap
starting from a strategically positioned market with deep crypto adoption,
strong regulatory momentum, and global cultural reach.
A lot of projects lead with vision.
Nasun leads with execution.
Its core systems and platforms are already live on devnet
not as isolated experiments, but as parts of a connected stack.
No long roadmap.
Just early infrastructure, already in motion.
But the real question isn’t just what @Nasun_io is building.
It’s how a system like this actually works
how value flows, how coordination happens,
and how the network holds it all together.
It still surprises me how liquidity in crypto is everywhere,
but not really connected.
It’s kinda funny because DeFi is growing
but capital still feels scattered across chains.
Been seeing what @RiverdotInc is building,
and it actually makes sense
they’re trying to make liquidity flow properly instead of just sitting in different places,
plus rewarding users for being active too at @River4fun
$RIVER
Saw a post about checking base score on @remoteaixyz
Out of curiosity I said why not
I didn’t participate in anything to become eligible but there’s no harm in trying right?
To my surprise?
I am in fact very eligible with 2000 points
If you have had any transactions on base network, then you should check yours too
Just 6 Days to go⏳
Here: https://t.co/ncAsTEwvCf
Remote AI is building autonomous agents to optimize token launches by bridging liquidity markets in real time.
Exclusively built on @base
Your past Base network activity now earns RA points — redeemable for $RA 👀
Check yours: https://t.co/1LbqU7QqtR
My $RIVER points don’t seem to be adding up
I have been posting for two days straight
But my points are still at zero
Is the site lagging or I’m I missing something?
Anyone else experiencing this?
Please @River4fun look into it
My $RIVER points don’t seem to be adding up
I have been posting for two days straight
But my points are still at zero
Is the site lagging or I’m I missing something?
Anyone else experiencing this?
Please @River4fun look into it