Technical deep dives, industry analysis, and lessons from 270+ blockchain projects.
> Most token launches are won or lost in the six months before TGE, when product, token design, legal, community, and growth decisions collide. Treat…
> Most idea-stage web3 products die from over-scope, not lack of vision. Ruthlessly cutting users, chains, features, tokens, and investor types down to one clear…
> Most first-time web3 founders don’t have a “fundraising problem.” They have a sequencing problem. The fix is to treat fundraising as a staged experiment:…
> Crypto history that matters isn’t trivia about Satoshi; it’s the small set of ideas that still constrain what you can build today. Use RSA,…
> In 2026, your “builder stack” as a non-technical Web3 founder is less about hiring engineers and more about composing infra and AI so a…
> Most idea-stage Web3 teams don’t need a “top accelerator”; they need the right mix of cash, users, legal clarity, and a few sharp humans…
> Most web3 teams blow up not because they picked the wrong round label or token standard, but because product, token, and fundraising tell three…
> Most “Web3” products are just conventional SaaS with a wallet login and a token bolted on. The ones that survive pick problems that are…
> Most crypto founders design tokens like meme stocks and then wonder why the price won’t hold. Design the token as the router for every…
> Most founders obsess over cliffs and copy equity vesting templates into token designs. The real lever is the unlock curve, which quietly decides whether…