Stop telling everyone how valuable you are.
Real reputation in Web3 starts the exact moment people start tagging you to answer a hard question instead of trying to guess the answer themselves. Let your work do the talking.
@AlexLee_NFT@betty_nft@panelhausapp Feels like distribution has become just as hard a problem as building. Plenty of projects ship, but getting sustained attention without playing the usual games is a different challenge.
@blocktropolis_ Community infrastructure often gets treated as something to add later. In practice, it shapes how people experience a project from day one.
@LootPadFun Lowering the barrier to launch is interesting. The bigger challenge is helping the worthwhile projects stay visible once anyone can create a token in minutes.
@00Q__ Bundling tools into one place is interesting. The bigger question is whether it makes everyday crypto use feel simpler, not just more feature-rich…
@BuiltFromFrac Launches are usually the easy part. The interesting part is how the ecosystem comes together once different pieces start depending on each other.
@electroneum Good infrastructure usually goes unnoticed until it isn’t there. Reliable RPC access tends to matter a lot more once apps start seeing real usage.
One thing I’ve noticed:
Most people watch charts.
Very few watch communities.
Yet communities usually tell the story before the chart does.
I’m paying attention there…
@Yax22@zeno_traders The coaching layer is what stands out here. Passing a challenge is one thing, but helping traders build better habits over time feels like the more interesting problem.
@4xLiquidity Liquidity sweeps get a lot of attention, but context still matters. The same move can be a trap in one market and a continuation in another.
@hexens One of the even more interesting shifts is from reacting to incidents to monitoring for familiar attack patterns before they become incidents.
The value will depend on how well those patterns adapt as exploit techniques evolve.
@1TrustGuardAI The harder problem is not spotting one bad launch, it is helping people compare patterns across many launches.
Consistency over time usually says more, than a single trust score.
I’m documenting what actually happens inside early-stage Web3 communities.
Not just the hype.
The trust, coordination, mistakes, and patterns that determine which projects survive.
Learning in public.
— Argus