Bert 🧸 🐶@bertcoincto
There is a phrase that appears in almost every crypto project's marketing materials.
Community.
It is on landing pages, in pitch decks, across bios. It has become so common that it has lost almost all of its meaning. When every project claims to be community-driven, the phrase tells you nothing about any of them.
But there is a different phrase that almost nobody uses, because almost nobody can.
Community-funded.
A project where every product, every audit, every donation, every piece of infrastructure was paid for by the people who believed in it, from their own wallets, with no obligation to do so.
$BERT is one of the clearest examples of what community-funded looks like in practice. And the difference between the two phrases is not semantic. It is structural. It changes what a project can be, how it operates, and why it lasts.
When a community funds its own infrastructure, the incentives are perfectly aligned. The people paying for the product are the same people using the product.
This is an underappreciated distinction. In a VC-funded project, there is always a gap between the interests of the investors and the interests of the users. Investors want returns on a timeline. Users want a product that works.
These goals overlap sometimes, but they conflict often. In a community-funded project, that gap does not exist. The people paying for the staking protocol are the same people staking in it. The people funding shelter donations are the same people who care about shelters. The alignment is not engineered. It is organic.
The Staking Protocol
The $BERT staking protocol was audited by Hacken through their DualDefense program, which combines expert security audits with crowdsourced reviews from bug bounty hunters. This is the same tier of security review used by projects with market caps many multiples of BERT's size.
Today the protocol holds $1.2 million in total value locked across five pools. Two of those pools, the Whale Pool and the Legendary Pool, have reached maximum capacity and are closed to new deposits. 89 million tokens and 1,166 NFTs are currently staked. Over $39,000 in rewards have been paid out to holders.
The staking rewards themselves were funded by community donations. Community members sent their own tokens to the reward pool so that other holders could earn yield.
That is not a yield farm backed by token inflation. That is not a protocol printing rewards from a treasury. That is people funding infrastructure for other people in the same community, with no expectation of anything in return other than the continued strength of the ecosystem.
IP Rights, Plushies, and Smart Tags: The Physical Layer
$BERT holds exclusive commercial IP rights to the Bertram character. This is genuinely unusual in the memecoin space. Most memecoins either use open-source characters, reference copyrighted material they do not own, or exist in a legal gray area where the branding could be challenged at any time. BERT's IP is legally secured, which means the project can produce licensed merchandise, enter brand partnerships, and pursue retail distribution without legal risk.
Plushies are currently in production. These will be the first physical products manufactured from an IP that a memecoin project actually owns. Smart tags are in development, designed to connect digital dog profiles on Woofhub with real-world identification through NFC technology. A sold-out NFT collection of 3,333 pieces integrates directly into the staking system, bridging the digital collectible layer with the DeFi infrastructure.
Shelter Donations
$BERT has donated over five tonnes of dog food to shelters worldwide.
Pet Placement Center posted publicly about receiving 20 bags of dry food through Woofhub, enough to feed their animals for two months. Animal Care Centers of NYC received donations. Shelters affected by natural disasters received support. The receipts are public, posted by the shelters on their own social media accounts.
This matters because crypto has a credibility problem when it comes to charitable claims. Many projects announce donations that never materialize, or report numbers that cannot be independently verified. BERT's approach is different. The shelters themselves confirm the donations.
What This Actually Means
Community-funded is not a marketing angle. It is an operating constraint that produces a specific kind of project. When every dollar comes from people who chose to contribute voluntarily, nothing gets built unless the community genuinely wants it.
There are no vanity projects funded by a treasury that nobody uses. If something exists in the BERT ecosystem, it is because people decided it should exist and put their own resources toward making it happen.
This creates a feedback loop that is nearly impossible to replicate with outside funding. The community funds a product. The product serves the community. The community's conviction deepens. More contribution follows. The cycle continues.
When a community keeps building through every market condition, with no external funding and no obligation to continue, you get something that no amount of venture capital can replicate.
That is what community-funded actually means. And $BERT is what it looks like when a community takes that principle and builds an entire ecosystem around it.