🪙 If you're going to buy an altcoin, do this first:
✅ Look for its real utility ❌ Don't buy just because "it's going to explode" ✅ Go to its website, check its roadmap ✅ See how many coins are in circulation and what its maximum is ✅ Make sure it doesn't rely solely on hype
Investing in altcoins without understanding the project is like marrying someone without knowing their name.
Learning about crypto is not difficult. The difficult part is enduring the feeling of being ignorant at the beginning 🧠💥
You join a group and everyone talks about L2, airdrops, farming, halving, nodes… And you, with luck, know how to open a wallet.
It's not that you're slow. It's just that no one takes the time to explain things properly.
That's why every time I understand something, I write it down, explain it, and share it. Because I know what it feels like to be lost among big words and zero help.
Sometimes I feel like crypto is like entering a jungle without a map 🧭🌿 Everyone talks about tokens, projects, and "opportunities", but no one explains to you what the basics are.
So I'm using this space for that. To share the things that *I do understand*, what I'm learning, and also what doesn't make sense to me.
I'm not an expert. Just someone who wants to learn seriously. And if you're in that too, welcome.
When I started reading about crypto, everything sounded like another language 🤯 Stablecoin, swap, staking, gas fee… and don’t even get me started on the networks.
That's why I'm starting to write here. Not to teach, but to share what I'm understanding along the way.
If you ever thought “what the hell am I reading?”, this space is also for you. No one is born knowing. But we can help each other understand more easily.
🚨 Today I almost fell for a scam… for trusting a token that had "active community" Spoiler: they were bots. Everything was fake. 👀 Every day more projects with nice names, perfect websites, and thousands of bought followers appear. What's the problem? Most people realize this after losing money. 🔥 If there's one thing I've learned in crypto, it's this: If a project needs to shout that it's legitimate… it probably isn't. 💡 In this series, I'm going to analyze tokens that are making noise but smell fishy from afar. Not all are scams… but many are. #Crypto_Jobs🎯 #BinanceSquare #Write2Earn #CryptoSecurity
❌ You are going to feel stupid for not understanding a swap 😤 You will get angry when a network charges you $12 to move $20 💸 And you will lose money for not knowing that a memecoin was already inflated
It happens to all of us. But few say it.
I will say it, because I didn't come to impress anyone I came to make it clear that in crypto you learn by losing… but you also gain when we share what already hurt
How useful is a project if it can’t even solve its own problem?
Today I came across a crypto that claims to “decentralize access to financial knowledge.” But its whitepaper is written in technical English, with no real examples, no case studies, and no active community.
Is that really access?
A lot of projects throw around buzzwords, but no one stops to ask the real question: "Would this tool help anyone outside of Twitter?"
I don’t care about marketing. I care about utility. That’s why in my next posts, I’ll break down projects that promise a lot… and deliver nothing. Starting with 3 tokens that use more words than solutions.
If you have one in mind, tell me. If you think everything is smoke, stay tuned. I’m turning on the light.