

MOONA ๐ค
23.8K posts

@Moona_ofWeb3
Building systems that turn silent Web3 brands into active ones โ SMM & Ghostwriter for founders & projects โ PoW in highlights




Everyday im seeing my fellow comrade @AwanWeb3 onboarding amazing builders, creators to the @ppuffins community! I luckily had a chance to work with @shimkeyy and @dch_crypt premint puffins on their KOL activation. Art is so good and their game is fun aswell so decided to grab these two beauties.



The global FX market is the largest financial market in the world. Every day, it moves about $7.5 trillion. But somehow, the people who need it the most are the ones it works against. And it works against them in more ways than one: โซ๏ธ Expensive cuts โซ๏ธ Delayed transfers โซ๏ธ Lost value โซ๏ธ Zero transparency on what's happening to your money Sometimes all of these at once. I just watched Danyel Arenas, founder of @KiiChainio, elaborate more on it, in this interview And one thing that actually stuck with me from the interview was the fact that: The problem was never access to money. It was access to the efficient movement of money. This is exactly what @KiiChainio is addressing at the root. KiiChain is building an L1 specifically for on-chain FX infrastructure. With Kii: โ Middlemen taking silent cuts are removed โ Transfers that took days settle almost instantly โ Broken systems are replaced with one efficient layer โ Full transparency on where your money is and what it's doing is finally accessible It's all about real infrastructure for real economic activity. If you haven't watched this yet, it's definitely worth your time.

The global FX market is the largest financial market in the world. Every day, it moves about $7.5 trillion. But somehow, the people who need it the most are the ones it works against. And it works against them in more ways than one: โซ๏ธ Expensive cuts โซ๏ธ Delayed transfers โซ๏ธ Lost value โซ๏ธ Zero transparency on what's happening to your money Sometimes all of these at once. I just watched Danyel Arenas, founder of @KiiChainio, elaborate more on it, in this interview And one thing that actually stuck with me from the interview was the fact that: The problem was never access to money. It was access to the efficient movement of money. This is exactly what @KiiChainio is addressing at the root. KiiChain is building an L1 specifically for on-chain FX infrastructure. With Kii: โ Middlemen taking silent cuts are removed โ Transfers that took days settle almost instantly โ Broken systems are replaced with one efficient layer โ Full transparency on where your money is and what it's doing is finally accessible It's all about real infrastructure for real economic activity. If you haven't watched this yet, it's definitely worth your time.


Genuinely asking: when did you last revoke your wallet approvals? if you can't remember, that's your answer. @CoWSwap got hit yesterday. Not a smart contract hack. A DNS hijack. Attackers didn't touch the code. They hijacked the domain. So when you typed cow. fi into your browser, you weren't going to the real site. You were going to a fake one designed to drain your wallet. This is called a frontend attack and it's way more common than people talk about. OpenEden got hit this way. Curvance too. Maple Finance. CoW Swap is just the latest. Your funds are only as safe as the website you're clicking through. So you got to build your habits, - Bookmark your DeFi sites. Never search and click. - Check the URL every time before connecting your wallet. - Use a wallet with built-in phishing protection (Rabby, MetaMask Snaps, Blockaid). - Revoke approvals regularly at @RevokeCash That last one is the part most people skip. Every time you've approved a dApp to spend your tokens, that permission stays active until you revoke it. Old approvals sitting in your wallet are an open door. Security in Web3 isn't just about code. It's about your habits. And most of us have bad ones. Go check. Right now.



The @apcollective devs have shipped a new tool Search or compare any 3 username to get a full breakdown of their X stats Try it here: creatorstats.apcollective.site




Today we're releasing Records - the first AI infra for IP growth, built on Base. Go to records.network to find the story of your favourite brands and NFTs. Proof of Culture.


look what I got ๐ @AwanWeb3 gifted me this cute @ppuffins , and he is piiink๐ who else got one?



So yesterday, we talked about having a content strategy. Today, letโs go deeper, because this is where most projects get it wrong. Content is understanding what type of content works, where it works, and why it works. Also note, there are different platforms, and each one behaves differently: YouTube, X, Instagram, TikTok, Reddit, LinkedIn, Facebook, they all reward different types of content. Now letโs break it down: โ Image content: clean graphics, carousels, infographics. Works best on Instagram, LinkedIn, and Facebook. This helps your brand stay visually consistent and communicate quickly. โ Video content; short clips, reels, long-form videos. Thrives on TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram Reels. This is where attention is highest and where you can explain, show personality, and reach more people. โ User-generated content (UGC): content from your community. Works across all platforms, especially X, TikTok, and Instagram. This builds trust because people believe people more than brands. โ Audio content: spaces, podcasts, live sessions. Best on X (Spaces), YouTube, and even LinkedIn events. This creates deeper connection and allows real-time interaction with your audience. โ Text-based content: tweets, threads, captions, posts. Performs well on X, LinkedIn, and Reddit. This is where you share ideas, educate, and position your brand as one that understands its space. Now hereโs the real part, Not every platform needs the same thing from you. And not every type of content will work the same way everywhere. The mistake most founders make is trying to do everything at once. But the real growth comes from understanding: what content works best for your brand, what platform your audience is on, and how to use both intentionally. Because itโs not about posting more, itโs about posting what actually works.