The worst advice I followed was “just HODL, never sell.”
When I first entered crypto, I kept hearing that real believers hold through everything. So I did. I watched one of my bags go from a nice profit to almost nothing because I was afraid of being the guy who sold too early.
The lesson wasn’t “sell everything.” It was that having a plan matters more than repeating slogans. Taking some profit, managing risk, and changing your mind when the facts change is not weakness.
That mistake taught me more than any bull market ever did.
@RallyOnChain
The advice I keep hearing in crypto is: "Never sell. Just HODL."
I don't think it's completely wrong, but people repeat it like it works in every situation.
I watched one of my best-performing bags turn into a loss because I convinced myself that selling any profit meant I didn't have enough conviction.
Now I see HODL as a strategy, not a religion. Sometimes protecting your gains is smarter than proving your loyalty to a token.
Thanks to @RallyOnChain for making people question the advice we repeat without thinking.
The worst advice I followed was “just HODL, never sell.”
When I first entered crypto, I kept hearing that real believers hold through everything. So I did. I watched one of my bags go from a nice profit to almost nothing because I was afraid of being the guy who sold too early.
The lesson wasn’t “sell everything.” It was that having a plan matters more than repeating slogans. Taking some profit, managing risk, and changing your mind when the facts change is not weakness.
That mistake taught me more than any bull market ever did.
@RallyOnChain
I've been thinking about this for a while, and I might be completely wrong, but here's my call.
Within the next 2 years, the projects getting the most attention won't be the ones with the biggest airdrops. They'll be the ones people actually keep using every week.
The market is getting tired of farming rewards and disappearing. Real products that solve everyday problems will finally have an edge over hype.
If that shift happens, I think we'll look back and realize 2027 was the year Web3 started keeping users instead of just attracting them.
That's my prediction.
@RallyOnChain
One prediction I'm willing to stand behind:
By the end of 2027, most successful Web3 apps won't ask users to manage seed phrases on day one. Wallet creation will happen quietly in the background, and people will care more about what they can do than how the wallet works.
The biggest barrier has never been blockchain. It's onboarding.
The projects that hide complexity without sacrificing ownership will win the next wave of users. Better UX will outperform louder token launches.
Curious to see if this ages well.
@RallyOnChain
I've been thinking about this for a while, and I might be completely wrong, but here's my call.
Within the next 2 years, the projects getting the most attention won't be the ones with the biggest airdrops. They'll be the ones people actually keep using every week.
The market is getting tired of farming rewards and disappearing. Real products that solve everyday problems will finally have an edge over hype.
If that shift happens, I think we'll look back and realize 2027 was the year Web3 started keeping users instead of just attracting them.
That's my prediction.
@RallyOnChain
One prediction I'm willing to stand behind:
By the end of 2027, most successful Web3 apps won't ask users to manage seed phrases on day one. Wallet creation will happen quietly in the background, and people will care more about what they can do than how the wallet works.
The biggest barrier has never been blockchain. It's onboarding.
The projects that hide complexity without sacrificing ownership will win the next wave of users. Better UX will outperform louder token launches.
Curious to see if this ages well.
@RallyOnChain
The thing that caught my attention wasn't another rewards program. It was how decisions are made.
Instead of relying on one company or one AI model, @RallyOnChain uses GenLayer's decentralized AI consensus to evaluate submissions. That makes the process feel more transparent and less dependent on a single opinion.
If creator platforms are going to use AI, this approach makes a lot more sense to me.
I'm curious to see how it evolves, so I'll be spending more time on https://t.co/wOGAicWov7. Worth checking out if you haven't already.
The thing that caught my attention wasn't another rewards program. It was how decisions are made.
Instead of relying on one company or one AI model, @RallyOnChain uses GenLayer's decentralized AI consensus to evaluate submissions. That makes the process feel more transparent and less dependent on a single opinion.
If creator platforms are going to use AI, this approach makes a lot more sense to me.
I'm curious to see how it evolves, so I'll be spending more time on https://t.co/wOGAicWov7. Worth checking out if you haven't already.
Before reading this, I thought RLPs were just another points system.
Now I see the difference.
On @RallyOnChain, RLPs already have a purpose. You can use them for gas, unlock exclusive campaigns, access USDC reward opportunities, and even qualify for ecosystem perks. That makes every point feel connected to real participation instead of empty farming.
The more creators and campaigns Rally adds, the more valuable that utility becomes. I like that the incentives reward people who actually contribute, not just those who show up for a single event.
Before reading this, I thought RLPs were just another points system.
Now I see the difference.
On @RallyOnChain, RLPs already have a purpose. You can use them for gas, unlock exclusive campaigns, access USDC reward opportunities, and even qualify for ecosystem perks. That makes every point feel connected to real participation instead of empty farming.
The more creators and campaigns Rally adds, the more valuable that utility becomes. I like that the incentives reward people who actually contribute, not just those who show up for a single event.
The most overrated thing in 2026 is chasing every new AI tool that shows up on your timeline.
The most underrated thing is mastering one workflow and sticking with it.
I spent weeks jumping between shiny tools because I thought the next one would magically make my work better. It didn't. The biggest improvement came when I stopped switching and learned one setup really well.
The flashy option gets the attention. The boring habit gets the results.
@RallyOnChain
One thing I think is seriously underrated in 2026 is keeping a simple notes file.
Not an AI app. Not another productivity system. Just one place where I save ideas, mistakes, and things I learn every day.
Most people ignore it because it feels too basic. I did too. Then I realized my best posts and best decisions came from thoughts I'd already written down weeks earlier.
If a friend kept asking me how to create better content, I'd tell them to start taking better notes before chasing another new tool.
@RallyOnChain
The most overrated thing in 2026 is chasing every new AI tool that shows up on your timeline.
The most underrated thing is mastering one workflow and sticking with it.
I spent weeks jumping between shiny tools because I thought the next one would magically make my work better. It didn't. The biggest improvement came when I stopped switching and learned one setup really well.
The flashy option gets the attention. The boring habit gets the results.
@RallyOnChain