

It started with a random DM on Telegram. You know the drill: some guy spamming “join this project, it’s the future.” I’m sitting there, sipping coffee, thinking, “Another day, another shill.” But this one stuck with me—RWA Nova, something about government-backed environmental projects.
They wanted me to sign up with their ref code. I didn’t bite right away.
Honestly, I never do.
But after months of boring investments, I got curious. What if there’s a hidden gem in all this noise?
Spoiler: I found one. Made $1 in 24 hours with just $10.
Shocking? You bet. Here’s how it unfolded 👇
Tactic #1: Ignore the Spam (At First)
Total cost: $0. Just my patience.
My inbox is a warzone—spam messages daily. “New project!” “Life-changing ROI!” I roll my eyes. Most are scams or desperate ref-hunters. I used to delete them instantly.
But here’s the thing: I’d been stuck in a rut.
My portfolio? Snooze-fest. So I thought, maybe there’s a diamond in this spam pile.
Didn’t join anything yet—just started paying attention. It’s not about falling for hype; it’s about spotting patterns.
Tactic #2: Dig for Hidden Gems (Curiosity)
Total cost: $0. Just some late-night scrolling.
After weeks of flat returns, I had time to kill.
Started digging through those spam messages. Most were junk—fake “Elon Musk” accounts or phishing links.
But some felt different. RWA Nova kept popping up.
People weren’t just shilling; they were explaining—government-backed RWA projects, not your usual crypto fluff.
I checked their site. No sketchy vibes. Real assets, real model. I didn’t use anyone’s ref code (sorry, spammers).
But I was intrigued. Sometimes, you gotta sift through the noise to find 💎.
Tactic #3: Test the Waters (Low-Risk Play)
Total cost: $10. My only risk.
RWA Nova’s pitch was wild—stake USDT, get 36% APR, no minimum.
Even better, a 10% bonus after 24 hours for their launch promo. I’d been burned before—GameFi scams, illiquid NFTs, you name it.
So I went small: $10 via MetaMask. Next day? Bam—$1 in $NOVA tokens.
I could leave it 30 days for $4 total or a year for $3.60 more.
If I had bigger balls, I’d drop $1,000. Point is, it worked. Low stakes, real returns.
That’s how you test a gem.
Tactic #4: Learn the Spam Game (Lessons)
Total cost: $0. Just my old mistakes.
Here’s what I figured out.
Spam comes in two flavors: One, scammers pretending to be someone they’re not, luring you to phishing links.
Two, ref-chasers pushing legit projects to climb leaderboards. The second kind? They’re annoying but often onto something.
RWA Nova’s spammers were type two—genuine builders, just overeager. My past taught me: check the project’s bones (real assets?), test tiny first, and never trust ref codes blindly. That $1 proved I’d learned.
Conclusion
So yeah—$10, one DM I almost ignored, and zero stress. Got $1 overnight, with more to come if I wait. Not every spam message is trash—some lead to wins. Proof you don’t need to trust every shill to find a gem. Who’s ready to dig through their inbox now?

