@sandeepnailwal The biggest milestone isn’t transaction volume anymore. It’s reaching the point where people use stablecoins without thinking about the underlying chain or rails.
It kinda makes a lot of sense for RWALESS to be the first $100B meme coin if you think about it.
Robinhood spends billions making “RWA” a household word. Every normie who learns the word learns the meme. You can’t buy that kind of distribution.
@jerallaire Spent years making stablecoins easier to move. The next challenge is making them disappear into the user experience so people focus on what they’re buying, not the payment rails.
Bought 10 SOL of $RWALESS.
I was an early buyer of $FARTCOIN and $USELESS.
You know what?
When we had FARTCOIN, the whole thesis was that it would flip so many VC-backed coins by market cap… and it actually did.
Then we had USELESS, born from the phrase that memecoins are “useless.”
Now look at Robinhood Chain.
Their founder, Vlad, said he wants RWAs on-chain, and that memecoins mean nothing if they don’t have value.
That’s where $RWALESS gets interesting.
The peak scenario for $RWALESS is if one day it flips every RWA token available on Robinhood.
Imagine one of the biggest exchanges building a chain for RWAs… and one of the biggest coins on that chain ends up being $RWALESS.
That would be one of the greatest moments in crypto.
I know many people are going to buy it just because it’s a meme.
I bought it because I think the lore can go insanely hard and send a statement.
The real peak moment?
Normies come to Robinhood to buy RWAs…
…and realize $RWALESS is worth more than the RWAs they came for.
0xcc68447a5ae88a563af55b9b78eede4c9dc3eaa3
@binance Stablecoins are becoming infrastructure. The next wave isn’t more ways to hold them, it’s more places to spend them.
products like @flyfitravel or @bitrefill start to matter by turning crypto into something you actually use.