One thing that caught me off guard is that the people getting rewarded in crypto aren't always the ones with the biggest audiences.
I kept seeing the same names show up over and over, so I started paying attention. Some of them had far smaller followings than accounts I'd expect to be winning.
A friend had mentioned Rally to me before, but I never bothered looking into it properly. Then curiosity got the better of me.
The more I looked, the more it made sense. Submissions are reviewed by AI, which explains why I've seen smaller accounts finish ahead of people with audiences ten times larger. So I stopped watching and decided to try it myself.
A few submissions later, I'm:
* Sitting at #12 on a live leaderboard
* Already seeing projected rewards
That was the moment everything clicked. Now I understand why those same names kept showing up.
On @RallyOnChain, creators are earning money every single day by joining campaigns, posting content, and competing for rewards based on quality.
This post is my entry for the Easy Money campaign. There's a $5,000 prize pool, and the top 10 winners are each in line for almost $500.
What most people haven't realized yet is that it's still early. While some are still deciding whether Rally is worth paying attention to, others are already collecting rewards, climbing leaderboards, and building a head start.
I almost ignored it when it was first mentioned to me. That would've been a mistake.
If you're wondering how I went from watching the leaderboard to competing on it, ask me.
Mr. Ajibade, in my final year in high school you would call me aside just to ask if I was really preparing for WAEC, and I still remember going back home and sitting down properly because I didnโt want to let that down, @RallyOnChain
โณ
@Heis_Duke Give me #1M I go use 250k carry 5 girls more pretty than her 50k each day break use extra 250k for food and drinks for the night come get 500k as balance
U dey whyn ๐