If you want to make the god money in crypto
BY DEFAULT you are going to have to hold positions 95% of people would not.
If most think it's a the right move, the profits are gone.
People thought early Bitcoin & eth holders were retards. Embrace the pain. Remain retarded.
Updates to @lookonsol_
1. Added infinite scrolling to the DCA feed, so you can see older transactions
2. Easy share button with custom designed cards. This makes the sharing of interesting DCA orders on Social Media easier
Enjoy
Digital-only banks have slowly been chipping away at traditional banks over the past decade.
They're all are built around the same pitch, “We’ll give you everything your bank does, but faster, cheaper, and from your phone.”
They don’t hold charters or vaults full of cash. They just sit on top of licensed partners and build better UX.
That model worked. Today, more than a billion people use digital-only banks, and the market is worth hundreds of billions.
Crypto neobanks are the next version of that idea. Same clean experience, same mobile-first design, but with stablecoins instead of fiat as the base layer.
You deposit USDT or USDC, it earns yield, and you can spend it anywhere through a linked Visa or Mastercard.
Under the hood, your balance sits in smart contracts, not in a bank account that some compliance officer can freeze because you bought a meme coin last week.
The difference is ownership. With crypto neobanks, you don’t store money with them; you use money through them.
That being said, let's have a quick look at a few notable players who are building crypto neobanks right.
@AntoineRSX Seriously though, no mainstream brand is good match for you, I see you with a niche micro brand, e.g. one with a natural stone face, those speak class in a very underwhelming way, originality and independent mind!
What REALLY happened on 10.10.25. Recap:
Binance just reminded everyone who really runs this market,
this crash wasn’t about trump, tariffs, or macro, that was noise,
the real story happened inside the books:
One market maker, you definitely know, moved $700M to Binance hours before the crash, 200M of that was in $BTC.
Few noticed.
Then, as traditional markets bled, crypto started following, but something was off
the order books on Binance went hollow. No bids, no walls, just a free fall waiting to happen.
Volume on $BTC candles:
> 23:00 – 2k sold
> 00:00 – 12k
> Even one-minute candle had 1k btc "inside"
Was this organic?
At $108k, liquidation pressure hit terminal velocity
Binance’s own market maker stopped defending the price and pulled liquidity
this is exactly why atom went to $0.001,
and the worst part? Traders couldn’t even fight back!
On every other exchange you could close, hedge, or buy the dip manually,
on Binance, buttons stopped working. Stop orders froze, limit orders hung,
only liquidations were executed perfectly (but not in the way should have been executed)
think about it — your position, 50x cross, stop at -1%
> market dumps 50%
> your stop never hits, your account gets nuked 25x over
> and if you were mirrored across pairs, it’s game over
arbitrage bots amplified it, selling where price still held, deepening the fall
lending protocols liquidated positions
> alts down 80%
> anything with 2x leverage or more = gone guaranteed.
> some positions with even less leverage were liquidated.
> hundreds of portfolios erased, some funds too, no one’s admitting it publicly yet, but you can read it between the lines
the market just showed its real nature - unfair, manipulated, and merciless,
only the strongest survive here, and sometimes even they can't handle it.
If you’re still here, bleeding but alive, you’ve already passed a test most never recover from
don’t quit now. Learn what actually moves price, not what influencers say does
the next wave rewards those who survived this one
follow, we will fight together
Farming the Aster airdrop is easier than you think.
And even if they tell you that you can't do it with a small capital.
They are lying to you so you don't get their share.
I ran a small account to millions in volume.
It takes less than 10 minutes:
https://t.co/sCH1IVp07b
Here’s a hard truth about modern society.
We don’t practice Capitalism anymore.
Rather, for the last 40 years we’ve been conducting a horrific experiment called “neoliberalism”. And we’re near the terminal point in that experiment, a stage I’ve been calling metastatic market fundamentalism.
Capitalism is agents organizing to seek profit by serving the needs and wants of customers. Metastatic market fundamentalism treats citizens as feedstock for corporate profits.
Social media is a canonical example. It’s established fact that Twitter, TikTok, Facebook, Instagram etc. algorithms, which are tuned to maximize advertising revenues via limbic activation, and produce political division and derangement, depression, and a host of other problems. But regulating against these algorithms might impair corporate profits, so America doesn’t regulate them. Because the system isn’t designed to protect the rights of Americans to not be exploited by corporations for profit. The system is to designed to protect corporations’ rights to extract maximum profit from citizens.
This is pathological sociopathy at societal scale.
I adore Capitalism. It’s a truly miraculous tool, but shouldn't be used to solve all problems.
Take science: it is unequivocally the optimal way to seek empirical truth and model reality. But science can't address which questions are worth asking, or what priorities are most important to citizens under resource constraints.
Similarly with Capitalism. It is an unparalleled engine for allocating resources and commercializing innovation, but it is a terrible arbiter of human values. When we ask the market to decide what constitutes a good life or a just society, it defaults to the only answer it knows: whatever is most profitable. That is the metastatic cancer.
A functional society knows when to invoke science, or capitalism, or democracy, or the judicial process, or the deliberative bodies that define its public good. The central challenge of governance is to protect the sovereignty of each institutional sphere, ensuring that the logic of the marketplace does not set the curriculum for our schools, write the laws for our courts, or determine the mission of our hospitals.
So here’s where we are: We built the most powerful resource allocation machine in history, then let it allocate us. We became the resource. The product. The feedstock. If you think I’m being dramatic, ask yourself - when did we last make a major policy decision that hurt corporate profits but helped actual humans? That silence you hear? That’s the cancer winning.
@MarkA487 Ok- so: any of your lovely oils be ingested? Of course we’re talking about drop or two per glass if ever… Has anyone tried that and gave a feedback, especially when comes to GI tract issues?
Cheerios