Gainzy tells Memecoin traders to STOP TRENCHING before they LOSE IT ALL!!!
"They make money on accident and then they think they're experts - or they're experts for a very small window and they don't realize that window is gone, and they keep thinking they're experts"
"Almost everybody that's ever made it on any memecoin - YOU'RE STUPID AS FUCK please stop trading - if you have any money left don't trade it you will lose it, congratulations on making it I'm happy for you but PLEASE stop trading"
"And please stop giving advice - you are unironically STUPID AS SHIT, you know nothing about trading, and this ego you have is both undeserved and will lead to your downfall"
"I am RETARDED - but I am MAGNITUDES smarter than you, and I promise you... you will lose it all"
how to go from a full head of hair to bald in one year
> daily energy drink
> smoke as many cigarettes as possible
> have a poor diet
> invest in crypto
> lots of alcohol
> blame genetics
This bet on Polymarket feels like a no as of now tbh.
3 of the following events most happen in a 90-day span.
Maybe I am just delusional, though, because once one domino starts collapsing, the rest might follow. If so, most likely NVIDIA, iShares PHLX, and one of the major AI Hardware suppliers.
If I had $100k in crypto now, I would:
1. Try to find a job in crypto. Ideally, something with a good part of the compensation as equity/tokens. Something in the intersection of AI/stablecoins/perps/RWA (if possible).
2. Build a Twitter audience and get a network here. Might get in handy when things are booming again, which is why it's the perfect time to start tbh.
3. If you can move to a place where the cost of living is low, that’s great. But I’d argue that having the right people around you matters more.
4. Allocate maybe like $70k in strong alts of this cycle. Some suggestions in my pinned tweet. If you believe in the 4-year cycle, maybe the best time to do so is between now and October, but maybe this time is different? $HYPE already had a great run on its own. I expect it to continue.
5. You’re going to earn something on your job as well, use this to cover your rent and IRL expenses. And if you have some surplus, you could ape these into 6).
6. The last $30k you could rotate around in perp protocols (hopefully grind some volume for a meaningful airdrop or two). In general, try to be where the money is. Get your hands on different games with small amounts to get a “feel” of what you’re good at. Could be DeFi strategies, perps, trench coins++.
NFA. DYOR.
Bitcoin (bitcoin:native) just tested the “it’s over” zone
2018 “it’s over” zone > 📈
2022 “it’s over” zone > 🚀
2026 “it’s over” zone >❓
will history repeat, or is it actually all over?
We had way more frequent price drops in $BTC and $ETH, like 3, 4, and 5 years ago. Kind of miss it, as it felt much better to blast altcoins after a fat nuke (and pray that it reverted higher).
Been using the Velvet beta over the past few days, and the main value so far is tracking smart wallet activity and seeing signals a bit earlier, which helps spot moves before they spread across CT.
CopyTrade is also built in, making it easier to stay exposed without needing to manage everything manually.
- Up to 100% cashback on fees
- $VELVET rewards
- Smart wallet + KOL tracking across 13M+ wallets
- Trading across Solana, Base, Hyperliquid, BNB, and more
I’m insanely optimistic about the next couple of years. Whether crypto is “over” or not doesn’t really matter; there will always be new games to play.
Personally, I believe what we’ve seen so far is just the starting point, and that major innovations at the intersection of AI and crypto are still ahead of us.
The part no one really prepares you for is what happens after you hit 7 or mid 7 figs.
For many, I guess this is the moment you feel real stability for the first time, especially if you’ve been through cycles of losing or even blowing up before, something subtle shifts in your brain where you stop optimizing for winning and start optimizing for not falling back down.
It shows up in your decisions over time, where you pass on trades, size down when you shouldn’t, and slowly become more focused on protecting what you built instead of expanding it. Because you don’t have to. The hunger is gone.
You start questioning your drive, your discipline, your ambition, when in reality, nothing is wrong except that the game no longer feels the same.
The way to fix this: Set yourself a new goal and hang around people who are at a level higher than you (who have already made what you want to make).
At the same time, I think it’s worth questioning the idea that 8-9 figs is some mandatory end goal, because blindly scaling just for the number can put you back into the same trap of chasing something external without really thinking about what you want your life to look like.
You don’t want to end up as the guy who has nothing but money to offer.
It’s really hard to define what’s enough. On one hand, I feel that I have more than enough already, on the other hand, I just want to see how far I can reach.
Like, I don’t want to just chill at home doing nothing or just travel endlessly. It is cool to play a game you’re good at, and stopping feels like a waste of potential.
A few weeks ago, an @Ethereum bot accidentally sent a random user $300,000.
It could have been a one-off bug, but it is not. It is a preview of what happens when agents control capital.
We are moving into an economy where AI agents transact, negotiate, and allocate value on their own. The real question is not whether they can execute. It is who is accountable when they fail.
Right now, the answer is no one. Crypto gives agents the rails, but there is no layer that says a real, accountable human authorised this.
@Concordium is building that. The Agent Registry ties agents to verifiable human identity. The Verified by Concordium badge makes that accountability visible to every counterparty.
That is the missing piece that the agentic economy cannot scale without.
As the agent economy scales, that accountability layer will not be optional.
Lots of chatter about Farza's Clicky launch video internally with Alliance founders. And just how well it performed, but the more important q that came up is how can other founders learn from it?
What makes a great product launch video? It's not the editing, production quality or even how much money you throw at it. The best launch videos clearly state a unique product that solves a real hair on fire problem and delivers an immediate "aha" moment where people instantly understand the value.
I really liked Farza's Clicky launch because it was doing multiple things at once. The music, the storytelling felt authentic, and the demos progressively got harder, building confidence that the product actually worked. It also introduced a new modality for interacting with a computer + AI, which made the "aha" even better.
If you're struggling with your launch, ask yourself is the product unique not a another copy/paste idea, does it solve a real problem, can people understand it immediately, and can you talk about it authentically? If the answer is yes, then launch and dont over think on video quality.
And you likely won't have to spend a ton of money or time on content either. A great product and a good story teller will sell itself.