My Top 10 (out-of-the-box) Projects That Will Survive🚀
What is happening in crypto right now, can be compared to the .com bubble bursting.
In that era, thousands of internet companies vanished but survivors like Amazon, Google and eBay thrived because they built durable infrastructure, captured real user value/revenue and had defensible moats amid widespread speculation.
In crypto, a similar shakeout would likely wipe out most speculative tokens, memes, and low-utility L1s/L2s lacking adoption or cash flow. Survivors would be projects delivering tangible utility—bridging crypto to real-world finance, compute, data, or physical infrastructure—while generating sustainable economics.
I’ve avoided the predictable heavyweights (BTC, ETH, SOL, and similar dominant L1s or broad smart contract platforms). Instead, here’s a thoughtful, out-of-the-box selection of 10 projects focused on specialised niches with real traction potential. These emphasise infrastructure/utility over hype, drawing from sectors like RWA tokenization, DePIN (Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Networks), decentralized AI/compute and high-revenue DeFi primitives.
Selection prioritises projects showing actual usage, revenue (or clear paths to it), partnerships, or network effects as of mid-2026 data.
@ElonTrades@gregosuri 100%
Greg Osuri is a visionary leader in decentralized cloud computing, with a proven track record. He's running this marathon well and is also one of the good guys in this industry.
V high hopes for $AKT
We probably should keep faith in BTC, (with fingers crossed), because if it fails, it won’t just hurt Bitcoin. It would likely drag the entire crypto ecosystem down with it.
Yes, some projects and blockchain technology would survive. The underlying tech has already proven useful far beyond price speculation. But the faith and capital that fuel this entire space would be shattered. Rebuilding that trust could easily take years, if not a decade. BTC isn’t just another coin, it’s the reserve asset and psychological anchor of the whole industry. When the king falls, the kingdom suffers.
@IIICapital Same here. I bought some more two hours ago.
There are a couple of people that I respect enormously in this space, shouting the end is nigh.
That is capitulation and for me, that's a time to dip my toes.
@10DowningStreet@JDMahama@Keir_Starmer You hypocrite Starmer. You treat Farage and Lowe as if they're Hitler, all for having mainstream views, yet this homophobe gets a red carpet. You left are sick people.
Indoctrinated, middle class people, largely from relatively privileged backgrounds.
When my children were in UK education, quite recently, although these teachers were educated, very few shone with bright intelligence. The average electrician or heating engineer has more grey matter and 10x more common sense.
And they tend to have better hygiene habits.
@ZynxBTC Iran getting paid in $BTC and BRICS possibly using it, could be a massive catalyst.
If not, we just need patience. Just like last time, same fear. Those that still believe, will deserve their reward.
I read this today in a UK paper. Carefully thought and gives very good reasons why to stay away.
I didn’t vote to leave the EU, but leave it was, that’s democracy. In hindsight I was wrong; much of the new information wasn’t available then.
Today I see a bright future for the UK if a government seizes the opportunities of true independence. The contrast with the EU is stark.The EU has become deeply risk-averse and is turning its back on high-tech sectors reshaping the world — AI, biotech, cloud computing and digital platforms. Its precautionary principle, heavy regulation, cultural caution and strict labour rules create an environment hostile to rapid innovation.
Europe lags in venture capital, scale-ups and unicorns, with promising firms relocating or being acquired abroad. Its own Draghi report exposed the competitiveness crisis and gap with the US and China.
If Britain is pulled back into that regulatory orbit, our challenges will worsen. Independence lets us set smarter rules, attract talent and capital, strike our own deals and back high-growth sectors.
The vote is settled. The real choice is whether we embrace a high-tech future or drift into managed decline. I’ve changed my mind on Brexit — the evidence keeps reinforcing it.