VarJames (OP)
Newbie

Activity: 14
Merit: 0
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June 14, 2026, 05:19:03 PM |
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I decided to create this thread to share some of my personal stories from the crypto world.
Over the years, I have seen and experienced different things here: good cases, bad decisions, technical problems, interesting people, missed opportunities, strange projects, useful lessons, and also some sad stories.
Crypto is not only about charts, coins, and prices. Behind all of this there are real people, emotions, mistakes, luck, greed, patience, and sometimes very expensive lessons.
In this thread, I will write from time to time about different situations I faced personally or observed closely. Some stories may be funny, some may be useful for beginners, and some may be a reminder of what not to do.
This is not financial advice and not a promotion of anything. Just personal experience and thoughts from someone who has been around this space for some time.
Feel free to share your own stories too if you have something interesting, painful, or useful to add.
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VarJames (OP)
Newbie

Activity: 14
Merit: 0
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June 14, 2026, 05:26:19 PM |
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STORY #1
One of my missed opportunities was the Cosmos ICO.
A friend of mine, who was much deeper into crypto than me at that time, told me about the Cosmos ICO. I was ready to participate, but everything ended so fast that I simply did not manage to get in. If I remember correctly, it closed in less than 5 minutes.
At first I was disappointed, but later Cosmos took a long time before entering the market. During that waiting period, I even started thinking: “Maybe it is good that I did not participate. Who knows what will happen with it?”
And then, when the token finally got listed, it showed more than x80 from the ICO price. Back then there were no token unlock schedules like we often see today, so early participants had a huge opportunity.
The funny and painful part is that I had prepared around $2,000 for that ICO. So every time I think about it now, I understand how big that missed opportunity could have been.
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VarJames (OP)
Newbie

Activity: 14
Merit: 0
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June 14, 2026, 05:32:21 PM |
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STORY #2 - BNB
When BNB was just appearing, people from one trading community I was in got an allocation. I had a chance to participate too, with a limit of up to $5,000.
But at that time Binance looked like just another no-name exchange to me. There were already many exchanges and projects appearing, and it was hard to understand which one would survive and which one would disappear.
So because of that fear, I decided to take only a very small amount instead of using the full allocation.
Looking back now, of course it feels painful. But at that moment it did not look obvious at all. It was not “Binance” as we know it today. It was just a new exchange with a new token, and many such stories ended badly back then.
This is one of those cases where the opportunity was there, but I did not have enough conviction to take it seriously.
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VarJames (OP)
Newbie

Activity: 14
Merit: 0
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June 14, 2026, 05:38:35 PM |
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STORY #3 - EMPTY TOKENS
Another story is about working for a crypto project.
At one point I worked in a project where part of the salary was paid in the project’s own tokens. And I made the mistake of not selling them regularly.
I kept thinking: “Maybe I should just hold them for the pump.” The founders were constantly talking to the community about big plans, future listings, growth, new features, partnerships, and all the usual things that sound very convincing when you are inside the project.
Instead of selling at least part of the tokens and taking something stable, I tried to save as much as possible and kept them on my balance, hoping that later it would turn into a bigger amount of money.
In reality, most of it stayed only as promises. And it was not only promises to the community, but also to the team itself.
In the end, I was left with tokens that were losing value, and I had to sell them in a hurry, just trying to save at least some percentage of their dollar value.
salary is salary If you are paid in project tokens, it is better to treat them carefully and not confuse payment for work with an investment.
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VarJames (OP)
Newbie

Activity: 14
Merit: 0
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June 14, 2026, 05:45:15 PM |
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STORY #4 - BTC FAUCETS
Another early story is about Bitcoin faucets.
This was back when I was a student and was always looking for different ways to make some extra money online. At some point I came across Bitcoin faucets.
I had heard or read something about BTC before, but I did not really check the price seriously. Back then some sites were paying small amounts of Bitcoin for viewing ads, clicking banners, or doing simple actions. Later there were also faucets where you just had to solve a captcha and claim a small reward.
So I started collecting BTC from these faucets. I do not remember the exact amount because it was a long time ago, but I think I had around 1.5-2 BTC, maybe a bit more or less.
Then one day I decided to check how much it was worth. The dollar value looked very small, and I did not really understand where to exchange it or what to do with it. So I slowly lost interest and just abandoned the whole thing.
Looking back now, it feels funny and a little painful. At that time it looked like some useless internet coins, but in reality that was my first real contact with Bitcoin.
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VarJames (OP)
Newbie

Activity: 14
Merit: 0
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June 14, 2026, 05:51:27 PM |
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STORY #5 - GUY STOLEN MONEY
Another story is from an RWA project I worked with.
One guy in the team was preparing a big guide about the platform and how its functions worked. To describe everything properly, he was given access to an account that had RWA tokens on the Polygon blockchain. If I remember correctly, the value was around $1,600.
The platform supported 24/7 exchange of those RWA tokens into USDT, so property owners could convert their tokens when needed.
And this guy quietly exchanged the tokens for USDT and withdrew the money to his own wallet.
At the next team meet, we were told what happened: he abused the access, took the funds, and was fired.
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VarJames (OP)
Newbie

Activity: 14
Merit: 0
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June 14, 2026, 06:00:43 PM |
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STORY #6 — POST & 1M IMPRESSIONS
Another story is from the time when the Binance vs FTX drama started.
I had recently watched HBO’s Chernobyl, and one scene really stayed in my head. Near the end, during the trial, the main character says something like: every lie we tell incurs a debt to the truth, and sooner or later that debt is paid.
When the situation with Sam and FTX started to unfold, that quote immediately came back to me. It felt very similar: for a long time everything looked fine from the outside, but if something is built on lies, leverage, and fake confidence, eventually reality catches up.
So I made a post from my personal Twitter account with a reference to that quote and connected it to Sam and FTX.
Unexpectedly, the post went viral and got more than 1 million views. I did not plan it as some big thread or analysis. It was just one thought at the right moment, when everyone was watching the story collapse in real time.
That moment taught me that sometimes in crypto the strongest content is not deep analysis, but a simple phrase that captures what many people are already feeling.
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jvanname
Member


Activity: 1865
Merit: 54
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Today at 05:39:18 AM |
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You cannot learn any lesson at all because you are too inept to realize that Bitcoin has a mining algorithm that was never designed to advance science.
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VarJames (OP)
Newbie

Activity: 14
Merit: 0
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Today at 05:50:36 AM |
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You cannot learn any lesson at all because you are too inept to realize that Bitcoin has a mining algorithm that was never designed to advance science.
What kind of nonsense is in this message? Do you see anywhere that I wrote about it? About BTC, mining, algorithms, swapspace, science?
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jvanname
Member


Activity: 1865
Merit: 54
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Today at 11:06:12 AM |
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You cannot learn any lesson at all because you are too inept to realize that Bitcoin has a mining algorithm that was never designed to advance science.
What kind of nonsense is in this message? Do you see anywhere that I wrote about it? About BTC, mining, algorithms, swapspace, science? You think my message is nonsense because you are dumb and can't understand anything. And part of the reason you can't understand anything is your stupid ass college degree. People with college degrees are morons.
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