@shaadaabak Traditional agencies definitely run on that illusion of safety. Using GenLayer to reward autonomous execution is how we finally fix distribution.
@BegardAhmadi Genuinely surprised the second audit pass got skipped over a three week delay. That seems like a small schedule cost against what a live exploit could've done to the protocol.
@MaaRii74sd Your public repository is a digital footprint that works for you 24/7. Itโs wild that people still trust a flat document over a live track record.
The narrative that Ethereum needs dozens of general-purpose L2s to scale might be Mid.
Not because L2s failed technically.
But because we may have optimized for the wrong definition of scaling.
We treated congestion and gas fees as the core bottleneck.
So we built systems that make execution cheaper, faster, and more parallel.
And in doing so, we assumed demand would naturally expand to fill the gap.
But demand did not expand in a new direction.
It mostly compressed into the same set of behaviors.
Trading. Incentives. Liquidity cycles. Speculation.
The surface scaled. The behavior did not.
Even across Arbitrum, Optimism, zkSync, Starknet, and Taiko, the economic activity rhymes more than it diverges.
Same primitives. Different environments.
Maybe the uncomfortable truth is this:
L2s solved a capacity problem correctly, but misdiagnosed a demand problem as an infrastructure problem.
And if that framing is wrong, then fragmentation was not inevitable. It was a consequence.
Why do you think L2 growth still converges toward the same user behavior instead of creating new ones?
@BegardAhmadi I did almost the same thing with a support bot, except mine actually made it worse because it was confident and wrong half the time, so users trusted bad answers instead of just being confused and asking again.
@banishahr6636 This comparison quietly explains why some campaigns fail to build community despite huge participation numbers. High farmer turnout looks like community but behaves nothing like it once the incentive disappears.
@MaaRii74sd Yes. Helped someone secure an allowlist spot, the project x10, and they vanished without even a thank you. People change when liquidity hits.
The worst crypto advice I ever blindly followed was three words: "Just HODL it."
During the bull run, taking profits was treated like betrayal. Sell and you were "paper hands." Hold and you were building generational wealth. I bought it completely.
I watched my portfolio hit $60,000. I stared at the sell button but told myself real winners don't sell early. So I held through the euphoria, through the first dip, and then through the brutal collapse, convincing myself it would always come back.
Today that $60,000 is worth about $5,000.
I wasn't even holding because I believed in the project anymore. I was holding because I couldn't admit I was wrong.
HODL stops being advice the moment it becomes a coping mechanism instead of a strategy.
These days I look at every dollar differently. I just became a mother, and now I know exactly what that money is for: my kid's health, comfort, and future.
Never let someone else's mantra manage your risk. The same gurus preaching diamond hands are often the first ones to exit.
Something I keep reminding myself of, including when I post on @RallyOnChain.
What's the biggest unrealized gain you watched disappear because you refused to take profit?
Six months of teaching someone everything I knew about crypto ended with them cutting me off for something I never even said.
Around 3 years ago, a friend asked me to explain crypto to them.
Not trading.
Not airdrops.
Just crypto from scratch.
They did not even know what a wallet was.
Nobody asked me to do it, but I still spent months walking them through everything.
Setting up wallets.
Bridging assets.
Testnets.
How to actually interact with projects.
How to avoid obvious mistakes most beginners make.
Even the small things like when to engage and when to just observe.
Everything I had learned the hard way, I gave it away for free.
At the time, I genuinely thought this is what helping someone build meant.
Then it flipped.
They started believing I was holding back opportunities from them so I could get ahead.
That was never true.
We have not spoken in about a year.
What I learned from that stayed with me.
Founder mode is not just building for yourself.
Sometimes it is building understanding in others without any control over how they interpret it later.
That is why the @RallyOnChain Founder Mode idea felt different to me.
Because it removes the guessing. It makes the output visible, not the intention.
Have you ever helped someone grow, only to realize they completely rewrote the story in their head?
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Do what is right, even if it is the hard thing.
Be on the right side of history.
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