UNCOD3 is the strategy-first team building the ecosystems that Web3 promised.
We design systems that endure, from loyalty frameworks and collectible layers to Telegram-native platforms where growth and culture connect.
Our work turns fandom into infrastructure, built with clarity, trust, and permanence.
Every project begins with a story. Ours will keep unfolding here.
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Most founders who get rejected go back and fix the deck.
Airbnb got rejected 7 times before anyone wrote them a check. Each time they went back and changed something.
The seventh meeting they stopped fixing the deck and fixed the story instead. $600k followed shortly after.
The deck was never the problem. It was just the most visible thing to fix.
The story is how the problem gets framed. Why the timing is urgent. What the investor is actually being asked to believe in. None of that changes when you update the slide design or clean up the font.
Most founders spend months perfecting a deck around a story that was never built for the room it was walking into.
Don’t be that founder.
MENA startup funding dropped 85% in March.
Most founders are treating that number as a reason to stop. The ones who aren't are about to have an enormous advantage.
Capital didn't disappear. Investors across the GCC have pulled back to reassess exposure and wait for clarity.
But the money is still there. And when the rooms open again, investors will move fast toward founders who are already ready and walk past the ones who aren't.
The founders who spend this window getting investor ready will be first in those conversations when capital starts moving again.
The hesitant ones who waited will spend the first months of that window catching up.
The moment a product tries to do everything it becomes impossible to fund.
Investors don't write checks for eighteen reasons to exist. They fund one thing that solves one problem better than anyone else in the room.
We are currently working with a founder who has deep industry knowledge, eighteen features and a prototype built on ambition rather than a validated MVP scope.
Before any brand or positioning work could start the product architecture had to be pressure tested and the feature set cut to something a founder could defend in a single conversation.
Knowing which features to cut is what determines whether any of it gets funded.
You're losing investors because of how well you know your business.
Every founder has lived the problem. Built the solution from scratch. Can answer any question thrown at them without hesitating.
And yet something gets lost when they sit across from someone who has never thought about their problem for a single minute. The urgency stays inside their head. The vision doesn't transfer. The investor nods, says they'll follow up and doesn't.
Knowing your business and telling its story to a stranger are two completely different skills. One comes from years of living inside it. The other has to be built deliberately, from the outside in, for a room that knows nothing and decides in two minutes.
Most founders only ever develop the first one.
Build the second skill before the next meeting opens.
Most startups treat branding as the final layer. Build the product, get traction, then figure out the story.
The market has already moved on by then.
Moomin Kheir on what founders actually lose when branding comes last, and when the right moment to take it seriously really is.
Most founders raise on the strength of a thesis alone and wonder why investors don't feel the urgency they do.
A thesis without a visible founder behind it, a product to point to or a brand to anchor it is just a conversation. Investors don't fund conversations.
We are currently working with a founder who had one of the strongest capital theses we have seen in infrastructure investment. Nothing around it existed yet.
No visible founder story, product or brand.
We are building all of it. Product strategy, brand development, investor narrative and pitch materials.
A thesis this strong deserves more than a conversation.
We keep seeing the same problem.
Founder has the conviction, the market is real, the team has the track record, the deck goes out, then there’s silence.
Not because the idea was wrong.
Because nobody in that room could follow the story fast enough to care.
Investors are not sitting with your deck for an hour. They are deciding in the first two minutes whether the next slide is worth opening. Most decks never clear that bar.
90% of the founders we work with think they have a pitch problem.
They have a clarity problem.
When you're raising, clarity is the product.
Most startups fail because investors don't understand it.
Investors decide in under 2 minutes whether your deck makes sense. If they're confused, they're out. If they have to work to understand it, they've already moved on.
We built Ascend to fix that: 12 weeks from unclear vision to investor-ready.
Product strategy that translates. Brand positioning that lands. A pitch deck that closes.
We've worked with pre-seed and seed-stage founders who had the vision but couldn't get traction. After Ascend, they're in rooms they couldn't access before.
Clarity is the difference between funded and forgotten.
The creator economy is one of the most active markets in the world. It is also one of the least structured.
Creators don't have reliable way to prove what they've actually done.
Brands spend serious budget on partnerships built on follower counts and gut feel.
The metrics exist. The activity exists. The trust does not.
ACTIVATE is a standards-driven reputation layer for the creator economy. Structured missions, transparent scoring and reputation that compounds.
This is where it starts.
Join us tomorrow for a major conversation around the convergence of Web3, AI and frontier technologies.
Our CEO, @thecryptosheikh , will host a fireside chat with @ellazhang516 from @yzilabs as part of @binance Online a 4-hour global livestream bringing together some of the biggest names across blockchain, AI, and technology.
With speakers including CZ, Pomp, Chamath, Brad Garlinghouse, Adam Back, the COO of @BlackRock , and more, this is set to be one of the industry’s must-watch discussions.
Topic: Bridging Blockchain, AI, and the Next Wave of Frontier Tech
Streaming live on Binance X, YouTube, and Square.
Starting tomorrow from 5:20 PM GST.
This one is a must-watch.
https://t.co/IjNvaq6tCo
Yes you can learn from reach, but it is not nearly effective as repeat behaviour.
The metrics that matter in participation systems are harder to fake:
· Activation over impressions
· Retention over reach
· Participation over engagement
They reflect whether the system is doing its job without constant stimulus.
Design around these measures from the start.
Not to optimise dashboards, but to reduce uncertainty about whether the system will hold after the launch.
Creators have no portable record of successful work. Brands spend $4.6 billion annually reaching audiences that do not exist.
UNCOD3 is building ACTIVATE to fix that.
Structured missions. Transparent scoring. Verified reputation that travels with the creator and means something to the brand.
Nike had one of the most iconic venues in Paris and a 50-year story to tell.
The risk: people walk through it like a museum. Look, take a photo and leave.
UNCOD3 built the WebAR layer to solve that. A challenge you could only finish by physically moving through the space.
Find all six sculptures. Read the façade through AR. Complete the loop, get something worth keeping.
People stopped touring and started hunting.
The venue was the backdrop. The participation was the product.
Complexity is not impressive. Restraint is.
If users need to understand the stack, the product has already failed.
The goal is not to teach people how the system works.
The goal is to make the experience feel simple, familiar and human, while the system underneath remains robust.
This is where many Web3 products lose the plot.
They confuse novelty with value.
They push education before utility.
They add friction in the name of “purity”.
Adoption happens when nothing feels new.
When the user can participate without thinking and the system earns trust through ease.
UNCOD3 designs for that.
The work is hiding complexity without removing meaning.
Restraint is not a style choice.
It is an engineering choice.
"A broken brand narrative costs you the room before the deck opens."
Moomin Kheir, Director of Brand & Creative Strategy at UNCOD3, on what a weak brand story actually costs founders at the point of raise, and why most don't even know they have one.
Most studios exit at launch because that's when the contract ends.
What happens after is structurally someone else's problem.
UNCOD3 is structured differently. We stay in the work until the system holds without us.
That means embedding with founders, running what we build, and treating the post-launch period as the job, not the epilogue.
Operators, not observers.
Trust doesn’t disappear overnight.
It leaks, one fake link and one bad refund at a time.
By the time the PR team tweets, belief is gone.
@ton_blockchain and @telegram are rebuilding the system from the inside.
Proof over promises.
Automation over apologies.
Privacy that protects without hiding.
Every transaction carries its own receipt of truth.
Every dispute can be settled without the usual guesswork.
It’s not fintech. It’s brand insurance for the open internet.
Halloween hit different this year.
@UniversalPics didn’t bring the monsters back, it unleashed them.
With @doodles behind the wheel, Dracula and crew skipped the cinema and moved into your @telegram chats.
🟣 Spooktacular animated Telegram sticker packs
🟣 Serialized, collectible digital comic
🟣 Viral art moments landing directly in your chats
Forget haunted houses. This was haunted bandwidth.
Stickers became collectibles. Comics turned into portals.
Every meme, remix, and game felt like part of a bigger experiment: what happens when a brand stops broadcasting and starts world-building?
It wasn’t a campaign. It was a cultural test run for what fandom looks like when you give people the tools, not the script.
🎥 Doodles