US stocks are becoming much more accessible for crypto users.
What caught my attention is how @MEXC has built a one-stop US stocks platform,
allowing you to access different US stock products using the USDT you already hold.
Whether you're looking to:
→ Trade US Stock Futures
→ Own real US shares through MEXC's partnered licensed brokers with RealStocks
→ Access tokenized stocks via Ondo × xStocks
→ Or explore selected Pre-IPO opportunities
And it's all available in just one app.
The feature that stood out most to me is US Stock Futures:
→ Trade with USDT
→ Go long or short
→ 0 platform trading fees during the promotional period
With AI driving momentum across chips, cloud computing, memory, and Big Tech, it's interesting to see crypto users getting easier access to US stock markets from the same platform they already use.
Have you explored US Stocks on MEXC yet?
Let me know your experience>>>
my video setup in 2026:
+ iPhone 17 Pro (shooting content)
+ iPhone 16 (alternative phone)
+ panel light ($25)
+ Tripod
+ alienware for editing
+ capcut ($29.99/year)
+ canva for in-video graphics (free)
+ my room as the studio
+ and my small brain
total extra cost to start: basically just the panel light, tripod and capcut (btw free version is just enough)
you don't need a $2k camera setup
you need to hit record and get reps in
the best camera is the one you have right now
@MeetAminX@stardotfun I just watched your video and tbh your cooked
My biggest take away is how star will make founders start up their project without the worry of pitching to investors and backers
Star got them covered
I love their tech
I just watched Adam's announcement for @stardotfun new Internet Rounds and spent some time digging into what they're building.
And tbh, this feels like one of the most interesting takes on startup fundraising I've seen in a while.
For years, we've accepted that if you're an early stage founder, your options are pretty limited:
pitch VCs, send cold emails, network relentlessly, and hope someone writes the first check.
Star is asking a different question:
What if your first investors were the people on the internet who already believe in you?
With Internet Rounds, founders can launch a fundraising round in minutes for an app, AI agent, startup, or even an early-stage idea, allowing supporters from around the world to participate.
What stood out to me is that this isn't crowdfunding in the traditional sense.
Backers receive equity-backed tokens tied to a percentage of the company's equity, meaning they're getting real ownership with built-in legal rights and protections.
There are also mechanisms designed to keep founders accountable:
→ Funds are streamed weekly instead of being unlocked all at once.
→ Larger withdrawals require investor approval, similar to how a board would oversee company spending.
→ If something goes wrong, there's a refund mechanism to help protect investors.
And this isn't just a concept anymore.
The model has already helped teams raise over $1.6M, showing there's genuine demand for a more internet-native way of funding startups.
One thing I also appreciated was @adamcreates_ launch video.
Instead of overcomplicating the message,
he used simple, cinematic storytelling and even featuring his mom and dog to show how accessible fundraising could become when communities are part of the journey from day one.
Whether Internet Rounds become the new standard or simply open another path for founders, I think this is a space worth paying attention to.
Curious to see how this evolves.
@MeetAminX@bricktopians@AlexIsBuilding Alex is inarguably the best and most hardworking founder and builder
I’ll love to see bricktopians bring back the creators workshop