Everyone Thinks I’m Building a Meme Coin. They’re Missing the Point.
A Nigerian student’s perspective on movement, infrastructure and why coordination might be the real layer behind Web3.
Most people who come across KEKE probably think I’m just another guy trying to launch a meme coin.
Honestly, I understand why.
Web3 today is filled with:
- new tokens
- new hype cycles
- new narratives every week
Everybody is searching for the next pump.
But somewhere along the line, I realized I wasn’t actually obsessed with coins.
I became obsessed with systems.
---
Web3 Is Really About Coordination
The deeper I go into Web3, the more I realize this space is not really about tokens.
It’s about coordination.
- How people move
- How value moves
- How communities organize
- How infrastructure survives pressure
- How systems adapt under stress
Money is only one layer.
Living in Nigeria forces you to notice these things differently.
---
Traffic Teaches Infrastructure Better Than Some Whitepapers
One fuel hike can affect movement across an entire city overnight.
One failed bank network can delay thousands of transfers instantly.
One blocked road can destroy productivity for an entire morning.
Yet somehow…
people still adapt.
That adaptation became the most interesting thing to me.
Because the systems that survive in Africa are rarely the most polished systems.
They are usually the systems built closest to reality itself.
---
Why KEKE Became Symbolic To Me 🛺
At first glance, it’s just transport.
But if you really observe it, it represents something deeper:
- movement
- adaptability
- accessibility
- street-level coordination
- survival
Cars get trapped in traffic.
Big buses struggle.
Formal systems slow down.
But somehow the KEKE still finds a way through.
Small.
Flexible.
Built around real conditions instead of ideal assumptions.
And honestly?
I think there’s a deeper lesson there about infrastructure.
---
Africa Already Has Living Systems Everywhere
A lot of Web3 still feels disconnected from how most humans actually live.
Too much focus on escaping reality.
Not enough focus on improving the systems people already depend on daily.
Meanwhile, Africa already contains powerful coordination systems hiding in plain sight.
- Street markets coordinating thousands of transactions daily
- Transport systems moving millions of people informally
- Roadside vendors adapting faster than some startups
- Communities surviving through trust networks and local intelligence
That’s infrastructure too.
---
Maybe This Is Where African Web3 Begins
Maybe Web3 becomes truly powerful when technology starts integrating with existing human systems instead of trying to replace reality completely.
Maybe the future of African Web3 will not come from endlessly copying Silicon Valley aesthetics and narratives.
Maybe it comes from finally paying attention to:
- our movement
- our culture
- our resilience
- our adaptation
- our everyday coordination
That’s what I’m exploring publicly through KEKE.
Not just as a token.
But as a lens for thinking about movement, systems and infrastructure from an African perspective.
Still learning.
Still building.
Still documenting the journey publicly.
But I genuinely believe the next important layer of Web3 may not just be financial.
It may be coordination itself 🌍🛺
What do you think?
#Web3 #Realworldasset #tokenization #KEKE
@Solarboypq Facts 🇳🇬🛺
A lot of people underestimate how much power they actually have.
We complain about the outcome, but participation is where change begins.
Your voice matters.
Your vote matters.
Your future matters.
The interesting part isn't the rewards.
It's the idea that ordinary people can contribute to infrastructure itself 🛺
For years we've been trained to think infrastructure belongs to governments and large corporations.
Models like this challenge that assumption.
That's worth paying attention to.
@Jewelzeyo@coinexcom The older I get in crypto, the more I realize that risk management is really self-management 🛺
The market is hard enough.
Fighting your own impulses makes it even harder.
Sometimes the best investment is building systems that protect you from yourself.
Everyone Thinks I’m Building a Meme Coin. They’re Missing the Point.
A Nigerian student’s perspective on movement, infrastructure and why coordination might be the real layer behind Web3.
Most people who come across KEKE probably think I’m just another guy trying to launch a meme coin.
Honestly, I understand why.
Web3 today is filled with:
- new tokens
- new hype cycles
- new narratives every week
Everybody is searching for the next pump.
But somewhere along the line, I realized I wasn’t actually obsessed with coins.
I became obsessed with systems.
---
Web3 Is Really About Coordination
The deeper I go into Web3, the more I realize this space is not really about tokens.
It’s about coordination.
- How people move
- How value moves
- How communities organize
- How infrastructure survives pressure
- How systems adapt under stress
Money is only one layer.
Living in Nigeria forces you to notice these things differently.
---
Traffic Teaches Infrastructure Better Than Some Whitepapers
One fuel hike can affect movement across an entire city overnight.
One failed bank network can delay thousands of transfers instantly.
One blocked road can destroy productivity for an entire morning.
Yet somehow…
people still adapt.
That adaptation became the most interesting thing to me.
Because the systems that survive in Africa are rarely the most polished systems.
They are usually the systems built closest to reality itself.
---
Why KEKE Became Symbolic To Me 🛺
At first glance, it’s just transport.
But if you really observe it, it represents something deeper:
- movement
- adaptability
- accessibility
- street-level coordination
- survival
Cars get trapped in traffic.
Big buses struggle.
Formal systems slow down.
But somehow the KEKE still finds a way through.
Small.
Flexible.
Built around real conditions instead of ideal assumptions.
And honestly?
I think there’s a deeper lesson there about infrastructure.
---
Africa Already Has Living Systems Everywhere
A lot of Web3 still feels disconnected from how most humans actually live.
Too much focus on escaping reality.
Not enough focus on improving the systems people already depend on daily.
Meanwhile, Africa already contains powerful coordination systems hiding in plain sight.
- Street markets coordinating thousands of transactions daily
- Transport systems moving millions of people informally
- Roadside vendors adapting faster than some startups
- Communities surviving through trust networks and local intelligence
That’s infrastructure too.
---
Maybe This Is Where African Web3 Begins
Maybe Web3 becomes truly powerful when technology starts integrating with existing human systems instead of trying to replace reality completely.
Maybe the future of African Web3 will not come from endlessly copying Silicon Valley aesthetics and narratives.
Maybe it comes from finally paying attention to:
- our movement
- our culture
- our resilience
- our adaptation
- our everyday coordination
That’s what I’m exploring publicly through KEKE.
Not just as a token.
But as a lens for thinking about movement, systems and infrastructure from an African perspective.
Still learning.
Still building.
Still documenting the journey publicly.
But I genuinely believe the next important layer of Web3 may not just be financial.
It may be coordination itself 🌍🛺
What do you think?
#Web3 #Realworldasset #tokenization #KEKE
🧵 I used to think NFTs were just profile pictures.
But the deeper I study Web3, the more I realize:
NFTs and tokenization are NOT the same thing.
Let me explain 👇
Good Morning Crypto Tweeter 🛺🤎
To a beautiful people with beautiful culture and beautiful dreams...
What's one thing you learned, achieved, or experienced this week that stayed with you?👇🏽🤎