
Linh180796
Linh180796
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On May 22, I would like to introduce the "Pizza Protocol" project:
• Max supply: 8 slices.
• Circulating supply: disappears after a few minutes.
• Burn mechanism: sent straight to the stomach wallet.
• Utility: saves Web3 traders at midnight.
Only after being in crypto long enough do you understand: the market keeps "dumping," while life keeps "dividing shares."
At least the Pizza still has stretchy cheese after being sliced, but my portfolio only stretches the red candle down to the ground.
Alright, let's eat a slice of Pizza to boost morale and then get back to holding, everyone 🚀🍕
#OKXPizzaDay @OKX星球 $BTC
Everyone keeps wondering if they need to maintain 5M for 3 months to get paid or not
Here is the answer
My 1 year only got 5.1M viu
From now on, try to earn 1M each month and it's fine

Linh180796
Today, everyone seems to have their earnings paused quite a bit, the spirit seems to be down
For those still active, let's fight hard, hopefully next time we get paid 3 digits
Since this morning, I've seen some acquaintances get paused, condolences to everyone, for those still going, be a bit more careful

Tria is gradually moving beyond the image of a typical “crypto wallet” and getting closer to becoming a consumer infrastructure layer for on-chain activity.
The important part is not just the support for 200+ chains, but how all of the complexity is hidden behind the user experience. When swaps, payments, and card spending happen within the same flow without users needing to think about bridges or settlement the way people interact with crypto starts to change.
The May metrics are also notable because they reflect real usage rather than just TVL or incentive farming. Volume, card spend, and active wallets suggest that users are starting to treat Tria as an everyday financial system, not just a place for short-term trading.
Season 3 reinforces that direction even further by tying rewards directly to real activity. If Tria can continue maintaining this usage loop, it could build a far more sustainable adoption model than many current Web3 projects.
@useTria

Linh180796
The more I spend time around crypto, the more I realize the biggest gap is no longer infrastructure.
It’s usability.
Web3 already has fast chains, deep liquidity, and endless protocols.
But for many new users, the experience still feels overwhelming before they even make their first transaction.
That’s why projects like useTria stand out to me.
Instead of adding more complexity, they’re trying to reduce the amount of friction users feel on a daily basis:
less switching,
less setup,
less confusion.
What matters in the next phase of crypto may not be who builds the most features,
but who makes powerful technology feel simple enough for normal people to use naturally.
Because users rarely come back for complexity.
They come back for convenience.
@useTria

The more I follow Injective, the more I feel like it’s taking a very different path compared to most Layer-1 ecosystems.
A lot of chains try to become “the blockchain for everything.”
But Injective seems much more focused on building infrastructure specifically for finance and trading from day one.
Personally, I think that focus matters.
Things like the on-chain orderbook, derivatives infrastructure, and cross-chain liquidity support make the ecosystem feel purpose-built for actual execution, not just another general ecosystem narrative.
I also think the MultiVM approach deserves more attention.
Supporting both EVM and CosmWasm gives developers from different ecosystems a much easier entry point while still keeping strong performance for DeFi applications.
What makes Injective interesting to me now is that it no longer feels limited to traditional DeFi.
With the growing push toward tokenized assets and RWAs, it feels like the ecosystem is slowly positioning itself for a much bigger on-chain financial market.
If the next cycle continues moving toward real financial utility instead of pure speculation, I wouldn’t be surprised to see Injective attract much more attention over time.
@injective

I think one of the smartest things they’re doing is turning community activity into an actual economic layer.
Most projects say “community first”.
But usually the community only helps with engagement and marketing.
Injective feels different because ecosystem activity can eventually feed back into the protocol itself through mechanisms like buybacks, on-chain volume, and network usage.
That changes the relationship between users and the ecosystem.
People are no longer just participating for hype.
They’re participating in a system where growth can potentially reinforce itself over time.
To me, that’s a much stronger model than relying only on narratives every cycle.
Because narratives fade.
But economic loops are what keep ecosystems alive long term.
@injective

Linh180796 reposted

The reason you see $INJ, $NEAR, $HYPE all mooning off their 5 year lows is because the bottom is in, has been in and the most risk tolerant investors are now scooping up the best crypto projects at 5 year lows.
And it's all happening while retail is salty that Saylor sold some dust and Trump won't get along with Iran.
Ignore the distractions.
Follow the money.






