GM☕️ I’ve been messing around with some small images on Robinhood Chain lately, and also watched a big train wreck. Let’s talk about it together.
The one that made money: OnChainHoodies — the chain’s earliest fully on-chain little images (the images, traits, and rendering logic are all stored in the contract; no IPFS needed). 6,000 free mints, 1-bit pixel art. I minted 2, then swept 8 more at 0.015. Over the past couple of days, most of them have come out in batches—profits doubled and I cashed out. Pork knuckle rice for days, haha 🤣
The floor price once surged to 0.09, but it’s since pulled back to around 0.04. Whether the hype can hold up—time will tell.
The one that crashed: ASCIIcats — character-art cats. The art style is genuinely beautiful, and the hype really picked up. I even had everything ready to mint. But the team absolutely squandered a great hand:
- Tokens weren’t even released yet; they released the coin first, and the CA was leaked early in an article they posted themselves. The opening got instantly dumped into the ground.
- Emergency snapshot and redeploying a new contract, saying they would compensate holders 1:1.
- Before things could settle, the website was flagged by Cloudflare as “suspected phishing,” and OpenSea immediately delisted the collection.
- The community is still arguing about whether they’re genuinely incompetent or just acting.
From releasing the token to the project essentially lying flat—took under 10 hours. This is the first time I’ve seen a team run faster than the mint 🫠
That’s what it’s like with these new-chain little images: opportunities and train wrecks both come down to quick hands. Robinhood Chain’s hype is real—at one point DEX daily trading volume even overtook Hyperliquid. And every day on-chain, a dozen-plus new projects rush to push into WL. I’ve kept my position small anyway; I’m just playing fast.
PS: Thanks to the ASCIIcats team for taking the car apart before I got on—so I didn’t end up riding it only to flip 🤡
#RobinhoodChain #NFT