This is sad to hear @ready_co I've been advocating this to my friends and now we have metal paperweights lmao but I hope you'll get back with a proper provider soon, as this is your core product and branding.
another rug shilled by KOLs:
> no updates in over 3 weeks
> last post made 2 weeks ago
> website looks vibe coded
> FDF copycat
> faked giveaways and events
> sold packs and mega boxes
> but marketplace isn’t even live
> player shares are useless
> money can’t be withdrawn
so those who bought packs or invested at launch haven’t been able to do anything with the funds
starknet posted 433% active address growth last year. arbitrum down 59%, optimism down 66%, zksync searching for relevance. strk captured 1,455 btc through tbTC integration and anchorage custody. only l2 actually growing found its niche: bitcoin holders who want yields without bridging to binance. token down 94% from highs, next unlock not until q2 2026.
Here are the 10 stablecoin cards I used during my Australia summer vacation. I’m staying 5 more days — which other card should I not forget to test?
They all worked fine, as expected from Visa or their PSPs, but their UX varies significantly.
I’ll do a short review of each: how I funded the card, which token I used, whether fiat ramps are available, costs, exchange rates and FX fees, rewards, and why I chose them.
Big thanks to the teams behind these awesome payment products:
@gnosispay@ready_co@SlingMoney@MetaMask@Exa_App@GetAmpPay@EtherFi@SolidYield@itstuyo@fusewallet
These stablecoin-funded payment cards have reached escape velocity (in web3) and are poised to drive blockchain adoption (in web2).
While this isn’t what onchain banking will ultimately look like, it’s a cool snapshot of the apps being built in the first (or maybe second) wave of self-custodial banks.