MENTAL HEALTH IN WEB3
Lots of people feel you should be used to the numerous amount of heartaches, emotional and mental stress that comes with the losses in this space, but itβs still highly essential to look after yourself and make sure to take a rest when due anonβ€οΈπ«. Gmπ
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Gm.
This might be a long one, but I think @Duce_ai is building something worth paying attention to.
Bear with me.
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Follower count should not be the only reason creators win campaigns.
Thatβs why Iβve been looking into Duce by @ssheyii.
Duce is building a creator campaign platform where creators are rewarded for the quality of their work rather than the size of their audience.
It shifts the focus from audience size to content quality.
Instead of rewarding size or noise, it rewards the people creating the best content. That's what makes it interesting.
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A lot of creator campaigns today still feel unfair.
If you already have a big following, you usually have a better chance of getting noticed.
But if youβre a smaller creator, even when your post is actually good, it can easily get ignored.
That means many talented people donβt get a real shot.
Duce is trying to change that.
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Hereβs the simple version of how Duce works:
A brand launches a campaign with a brief, rules, and a reward pool.
Creators make social posts and submit their links.
Duceβs AI scores every submission based on originality, reception quality, brand alignment, and creativity.
Then the project reviews the ranked entries and picks the winners.
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The AI does not automatically pick winners. It scores and ranks the posts.
Then the brand makes the final decision.
So there is still a human side to it.
The AI helps sort through everything, but the project still decides who wins.
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What I like most is that Duce is not just rewarding follower count; It looks at the actual work.
- Was the post creative?
- Did it match the brand?
- Was it original?
- Did people respond well to it?
A smaller creator with a genuinely strong post can outrank a bigger account that puts in low effort.
That changes the incentive structure.
- Creators are pushed to make better content.
- Brands get more authentic work.
- Campaigns shift the focus from distribution to quality.
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Duce already has real traction:
6,100+ platform sign ups
3,000+ entries scored
500+ winners rewarded
$59,500 in rewards paid
100% of submissions scored
That last part matters because it basically means every post gets reviewed.
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For creators, this is a good opportunity.
You donβt need to have a huge audience before you can compete. If your content is good, you have a chance.
Thatβs good for smaller creators, underrated accounts, niche writers, and people who are creative but donβt always get noticed.
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For brands and projects, the value is also obvious.
Instead of running manual contests across social platforms, they can launch a campaign, receive real creator content, have every post scored, and distribute rewards through the platform.
It saves time and gives them better content from real creators. Everyone gets a clearer process.
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The anti-slop angle is underrated.
When campaigns only reward reach, people optimize for spam, copy-paste posts, and lazy engagement bait.
Duce is pushing the game toward originality, creativity, brand fit, and actual quality.
That is the right direction for creator campaigns.
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Rewards are also handled through the platform; That matters.
Creator campaigns only work long term if people trust that submissions are reviewed fairly and rewards actually get paid.
Duce has already paid out $59,500 in rewards, with 500+ winners rewarded.
That builds credibility.
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The bigger picture is where this gets interesting.
Duce sits at the intersection of:
- AI-assisted campaign judging
- Creator monetization
- Brand growth
- Social content distribution
- Merit-based rewards
That combination feels very timely.
Brands need authentic content.
Creators want better ways to earn.
AI makes review scalable.
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The way I see it; Duce is building a platform where creators can earn from brand campaigns based on the quality of their work.
Beyond followers and clout, the focus is on actual content. If Duce becomes the place where brands launch campaigns and creators compete based on quality, it has the potential to become a core piece of creator economy infrastructure.
More than just another contest platform. A better marketplace for attention, creativity, and rewards.
Funny watching the timeline argue about paid mints vs free mints.
Most people don't actually care which one it is imo.
They care whether they'll make money from it or nah.
As for me, I'll be there with @Crest_xD regardless of any.
GM and happy new week π€
Managing money shouldn't require 3 different apps.
@OneBanking_app combines banking, crypto, real world assets, and an AI financial coach into one seamless experience.
12k+ users are already on the waitlist and beta launches soon.
Worth keeping on your radar.
Another day to keep pushing w @Crest_XD
Appreciate the allocation @bunya_eth and congrats on the sell out.
One thing I really liked was the mint structure. GTD spot was GTD and still had the chance to mint again during FCFS phase.
Curious to see how high this goes.
Your wallet activity tells one story.
The communities you've supported tell another.
Been seeing more communities pop up with the Eligible Community Badge on @heyAura.
Definitely worth checking your status.
You might qualify for more than you expect.
Been trying out @Ouinex lately and one thing I like is how simple everything feels.
Instead of needing different apps for different markets, you can access crypto, stocks, forex, commodities, and more all in one place.
What also caught my attention is that they're giving people a chance to practice with virtual funds through Golden Arena while competing for a share of a $20,000 reward pool.
If you're into trading or just curious to explore something new, I'd say it's worth checking out tbf.
Sign up here: https://t.co/cj0MBL2ibH
Crest xD x Racerz
An anime inspired NFT collection blending retro racing culture with a futuristic world on Ethereum.
Climb the ranks, uncover the lore, and prepare to face the Final Bosses.
Glad to be collaborating with @Racerz_eth.
Crest xD x Prehistoria.
1111 prehistoric relics built for collectors, inspired by fossils, ancient artifacts, and the spirit of discovery.
A premium collector focused ecosystem where history meets digital ownership.
More info in our Discord.
Floating marks; reminds me of Tetris game
Keep an eye on PATTERN RETRIEVAL by @adamilenich
478 supply.
0.0069 Eth MP.
Missed out on florentines?
Hopefully we get in this.
Gm,
Every day in Web3, new chains launch, new yields appear, and new opportunities emerge.
Keeping up is practically a full time job.
@heyAura is building for a future where AI agents do the monitoring, research, and execution for you.
Would check this out if i were you.
curry is an an original ingredient in nigerian fried rice recipe. it is not a recent invention. it has always been one of the ingredients of nigerian fried rice.
first off, curry wonβt give you that greenness. the greenness is gotten from some βfried rice spicesβ that are completely green in color. what curry gives is a yellow hue, which can be faint, or warm. and that is gotten from the tumeric in a curry blend (which is a blend of different spices. for Gino curry powder, it has: tumeric, coriander, cumin, black pepper, garlic, fennel, and nutmeg).
the nigerian fried rice we make is itself a relatively modern dish. hence, the facts are easily accessible. it emerged around the 70s/80s. it is a twist spun off of the chinese fried rice (that came to nigeria around late 20th century when the chinese first came to nigeria to trade).
and that first twist of the chinese fried rice into nigerian fried rice had curry powder in it. it was curry powder (ducros curry and thyme which were in small containers), thyme, liver, carrot, peas, and spring onion that women and caterers were using at the time to make nig. fried rice. sweet corn and bell peppers werenβt even in the picture then.
even the fried rices from restaurants like sweet sensation, tantalizers, and
tastee in early/mid 2000s had/have curry in them. not sure if @mrbiggsng had fried rice on their menu then.
the recipe has ever since evolved. we have a number of twists to it now. the original protein base (liver) has been replaced by a number of other proteins such as shrimps, sausage, beef, gizzard, etc. and now we even have a number of versions spun off the nigerian fried rice, such as sea food fried rice, asun fried rice, etc.
there has been room for evolution. and itβs completely okay to question certain things that come with that evolution, if need be. but curry is not part of that evolution. it has been a skin of the nigerian fried rice recipe since time immemorial. and it is not a questionable ingredient, because it is a blend of different natural dried spices. it is not injurious.
if we are talking about portion or quantity in light of usage, that is a different conversation. but saying that curry powder should be expunged from nigerian fried rice recipe is not a strong argument.