🚨URGENT
If you have ever created a wallet through @TradeonNova or imported an existing wallet into Nova, move your funds immediately.
The platform has been completely non-functional for the past several days.
There are reports of funds being drained from user wallets.
Transfer all assets to a brand-new wallet immediately and do not interact with the affected wallets until the situation is clarified.
Act now and prioritize securing your funds.
Official X page is up , still in the works but give a follow.
Again I want to reiterate this account will not post the CA or promote anything about the token. Although it will be for the token I don't want the account suspended.
Community will be for the token.
@Astroid_Sol
Thanks to @Cryptolows , X will be up shortly
Followed by premium for verification.
Now we have to be extra cautious shilling any CA's from the official account because X have become a lot more strict
The main official account will limit token interaction but have other types of posts / memes
The Community will be for the token
That feeling of discomfort actually makes sense.
First off, “Asteroid” is just a very obvious, “correct” word adults tend to pick because it sounds space-related.
But kids don’t think like that. Their naming is way more driven by sound and imagination — they just create original words naturally.
So in this case:
- The drawing: a dog astronaut
- The name written: “Astroid” (misspelled)
Instead of assuming:
→ “They tried to write Asteroid and got it wrong”
It’s more likely:
→ “They took ‘Astro’ (space) and combined it with something that sounds cool”
Especially since “Astro” comes easily from words like “astronaut,” it’s very natural for a kid to think:
→ “I want a space-like name”
→ “Astroid!”
Meanwhile, adults tend to “correct” it by mapping it to a real word:
→ “Oh, space = Asteroid”
So the real gap here is:
Kids: creating a name
Adults: forcing it into a known word
That’s why it feels off.
What you’re sensing is basically:
“This is supposed to be a name, not a dictionary word.”
So honestly, “Astroid” might actually be the more correct choice for the artwork.
If anything, it feels more like a pure, childlike creation.
And when adults overwrite that with “correctness,” they kind of erase the most interesting part.
Only Elon will decide degens fate 😛
The fact
1. Liv wrote $Astroid on paper that’s what we all see in the drawing photos.
2. Her mom says it was a misspelling and the correct intended name is $Asteroid
3. The plush toy, official Polaris marketing and most coverage all use Asteroid.
The major catalyst: Can you make Astroid the mascot for SpaceX?
If Elon ever replies to question #8, it will be interesting to see which spelling he uses.
Which is the correct name $ASTEROID or $ASTROID
The story behind the name: Why she spelt it ASTROID not ASTEROID?
A heart touching story:
Liv Perrotto deliberately spelled the name Astroid
She was left-handed. In her cancer battle, the tumors affected the left side of her body, which impacted her handwriting and fine motor skills.
She consistently spelled and labeled her Shiba Inu character as Astroid in her original drawing
The family and community have respected Liv’s exact spelling as part of honoring her creation
It is true that her creation is called Asteroid in the official Polaris Dawn announcements and merchandise that is because asteroid is the correct English word for a space rock, Liv herself named her dog Astroid
If Bags wants to produce a real runner, they need to stop pushing Punch clones and start backing $Yuji.
They should move in a way that guarantees donations actually get delivered.
This has the potential to surpass Pump’s Yuji that one is just a CB, and it’ll run out of fuel eventually.
Looks like @netflix rumors are true 👀👀👀👀
One of the most advanced camera's in the world has been installed at $PUNCH's zoo Equipped with AI & Automatically tracks Punch all day.
this was just installed in the zoo 2 days ago for punch👀
PUNCH IS GOING TO BE THE BIGGEST SUPERSTAR IN THE WORLD 🍌