F҈U҈Z҈Z҈Y҈ 4͓̽2͓̽0͓̽

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F҈U҈Z҈Z҈Y҈ 4͓̽2͓̽0͓̽

F҈U҈Z҈Z҈Y҈ 4͓̽2͓̽0͓̽

@Fuzzy42wenty

Fuzzy World Katılım Mayıs 2026
162 Takip Edilen491 Takipçiler
F҈U҈Z҈Z҈Y҈ 4͓̽2͓̽0͓̽
Brad Garlinghouse has been using the phrase “North Star” quite consistently when talking about Ripple’s long term direction. It comes across as their guiding reference point, the principle they keep returning to when describing where the company is headed. What stands out is how closely this lines up with something from the Maya tradition. The Maya had a specific name for the North Star: Xamann Ek. They used it for practical night navigation, especially along the coast, but it carried deeper meaning. For them, the north direction was tied to the heavens, wisdom, and a sense of steady, unchanging guidance while everything else moved. The Maya didn’t see the North Star as existing on its own. They placed it within a larger cosmic structure centered on the World Tree, a central axis that connected the underworld, the surface world, and the heavens above. In their view, there were 13 layers of heavens stacked on top of each other. The number 13 appeared constantly in their system: it structured their sacred calendar and defined the layered order of the cosmos itself. It marked thresholds and the deeper framework that held everything together. On top of that, the main self custodial wallet most people use on the XRP Ledger is called Xaman, a name that sits extremely close to Xamann Ek. This wallet is the primary tool for holding and moving value within the system. So you have a modern company repeatedly talking about a “North Star” as its guiding force, while the main practical tool in its ecosystem carries a name that echoes an ancient North Star tied to a central cosmic axis and the number 13. It creates a noticeable thread. Both the ancient and modern sides keep returning to the same core ideas: a steady center for direction, movement through structured layers, and something reliable to navigate by while everything else turns. Whether this is deliberate naming or just patterns resurfacing, it adds real weight to the idea that certain symbols around guidance and long term direction keep showing up in systems built around value and movement.
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F҈U҈Z҈Z҈Y҈ 4͓̽2͓̽0͓̽
The number 432 keeps showing up as a marker for the length and weight of the current age. In the old Hindu cycles, Kali Yuga runs 432,000 years, the phase where things get densest and hardest to see through. The Babylonian priest Berossus listed ten kings before the flood whose reigns added up to the same 432,000 years. The big precession cycle divides into it cleanly too and it sits in the harmonic series that some still treat as the more natural tuning reference. So when a project tied to the XRP Ledger dropped that old style treasure map called “X marks the P” and it turned out to be their 432nd post, it lands with weight. The map shows a journey from a sleeping state, through quiet and hidden routes, toward some kind of first light or reset. Posting it exactly at 432 ties the number that measures the present stretch of forgetting straight to a picture of waking up and moving through it. It doesn’t prove anything on its own but the match is sharp. The same figure that describes how long this phase has been running in older systems is the coordinate where someone put out a map of the way forward using tools built on a decentralized ledger. People looking for signs around a financial or civilizational reset often track numbers like this.
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Celesto
Celesto@God2HaveFaith·
Shall We Play A Game!!! Remember Remember the Fifth of November.. Continuing the same pattern from the first 4 posts on the map until we reach post 13, we land perfectly on the second / of the X, the last mark on the trail. The final 13th post on the map is when we arrive at “X marks the P” on 11/5/26. Leaving us with 6 $FUZZY posts left in Phase 2 before the start of Phase 3, which I believe will be the “Celebration of Loadstar 3.” There are only 2 sets of back to back unused green circles on the map. The first set we see between 6/15 and 6/28 where there was an “Unknown King” in both of those posts. The final set is between 9/1 and 9/14, which is the “Forebear Cave” and the “Rocket on The Unmapped Isle.” I think there will be another character in both of these posts, and it’s going to be… a BiG one. Also compare the 1 year $FUZZY deltas from the last 6 posts on the map from 9/1 - 11/5 to where we might be on the map. Can you see the story? $FUZZY
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Celesto
Celesto@God2HaveFaith·
Shall We Play A Game!!! The numbers were never random.. First let’s solve, T-26-13 Assuming, Total-26 posts-13 days 26x13=338=T 338-26-13 On the next post we see, Phase 2 currently in progress T -MINUS 1-0-3 days Assuming, 1 year-0 months-3 days T=338 -MINUS 368 days = -30 days So will Phase 2 have 30 post dates, every 13 days ending on January 22, 2027? I believe $FUZZY confirmed this on 3/29/26 by NAMING the post “25.” Watch the video below, starting with the first post of Phase 2 counting backwards from 30.
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F҈U҈Z҈Z҈Y҈ 4͓̽2͓̽0͓̽
Path 28 is called Tzaddi (pronounced “tsah-dee”). In simple terms, it’s the stage on the spiritual journey where you finally get real guidance and clarity after being confused or stuck in cycles. Think of it like this: Imagine you’ve been walking through a dark, foggy forest for a long time (that’s the previous stage, called the Moon). You couldn’t see clearly, you kept going in circles, and you didn’t know what was real or fake. Then suddenly, a light appears. Not a huge dramatic spotlight, but a steady, clear light that shows you the way forward. That light is Path 28. The symbol for this path is a fish-hook. The idea is that something important was hidden underwater (or buried), and now you’re actively reaching in and pulling it out so you can actually use it. It’s not passive, you have to reach for the guidance and bring it into the open. In the current Fuzzybear artwork, this is what’s happening: The bear used to be the one navigating the confusion. Now he’s the one holding the lantern (the light) and raising it up. He’s pulling the hidden things (the traps, the dormant power, the transformation symbols) out of the darkness and into view. So in very simple terms: Path 28 is the moment after confusion where real guidance appears, and you start using it to move forward instead of staying lost.
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F҈U҈Z҈Z҈Y҈ 4͓̽2͓̽0͓̽
This is the same lazy racial cosplay you keep pushing. Afghanistan isn't some pure "Aryan territory" being "occupied" by Islam like a foreign army camped on sacred soil. Pashtuns are Eastern Iranian, the living descendants of the very Indo Iranian peoples ancient sources called Aryan. They (and the region) didn't get conquered by Arabs and then sit around crying about it for 1300 years. Islam spread through conquest in phases, local dynasties, Sufi networks, and eventual integration. The people who live there now are the continuation of those ancient populations, not some alien occupiers squatting on European looking pagans. Those Nuristani photos you posted? Real variation exists in isolated Hindu Kush groups because they converted late (forcibly, in 1895-96 by the Afghan emir Abdur Rahman Khan during his state consolidation after the Durand Line — not some external Arab crusade). Their lighter features reflect retained ancient West Eurasian ancestry in a geographically isolated pocket. Actual genetic studies show this: clinal West Eurasian + steppe components across Pashtuns and Nuristanis, with normal regional admixture. It doesn't prove your fantasy of a hidden Aryan nation under Islamic jackboot. It proves populations change, mix, and adapt exactly like every other group on Earth. Your "anthropologist" routine keeps reducing complex Eurasian history to "noble ancient Aryans suppressed by Semitic religion" for the same audience that eats this shit up. It's cherry picked, anachronistic, and ideologically driven. The Aryans you're romanticizing became Muslim Afghans and Pakistanis over centuries. That's not occupation. That's history. Your framing is just cope dressed up as revelation.
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Robert Sepehr
Robert Sepehr@robertsepehr·
@Afghana609 Afghanistan is Aryan territory that is being occupied by Islam.
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Afghan Girl
Afghan Girl@Afghana609·
If you hate Islam, then we're friends.
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F҈U҈Z҈Z҈Y҈ 4͓̽2͓̽0͓̽
I’m Pakistani, born and raised. I’ve been to the northern areas myself, so I’m not guessing from videos. Pathans and Afghans up there naturally have blonde or red hair and lighter eyes, in some cases it’s visible variation across those mountain regions, not some rare or special thing. The way this gets framed as a “special Aryan tribe” with a high degree of those features feels exaggerated. The Kalash are a small community with an old religion that survived, and yes some individuals show lighter traits. But similar features show up among Pashtuns and other northern groups. It’s normal admixture and regional diversity in the Hindu Kush, not evidence of a unique preserved bloodline. I’ve seen this pattern before with certain creators. They take real observations, mix in half truths, and push narratives about ancient superior White or Aryan races. That part doesn’t hold up. It turns normal human variation in a crossroads area into something it’s not. “Trust me bro, ancient Aryans” works better as a meme than as anthropology when you’ve actually been there and seen the bigger picture.
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Robert Sepehr
Robert Sepehr@robertsepehr·
@Lordmiles The Kalash are an Aryan tribe numbering about 5,000 individuals living on the Pakistan and Afghanistan border. Known to have a high degree of blonde hair and blue eyes, they subscribe to an ancient non-Vedic pagan religion that is in alignment with nature. youtube.com/watch?v=I2_wEa…
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Lord Miles
Lord Miles@Lordmiles·
Nuristan is one of the most remote religions of Afghanistan, being pagan until 1895. They are believed to be Indo European as seen by their blonde hair, blue eyes and white complexion. I’m doing a group tour in Afghanistan in November where I’ll collect saliva samples from willing participants to analyze their DNA. I’ll also measure skull shapes and nose widths. Bookmark this for 8 months for results
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F҈U҈Z҈Z҈Y҈ 4͓̽2͓̽0͓̽
@TheFlowCrypto @fuzzy_jon If ideas are judged purely on merit, then I'd genuinely like to know what specifically do you think my ideas or theories lack? If there's a flaw in the reasoning or methodology, point it out. That's a discussion worth having.
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F҈U҈Z҈Z҈Y҈ 4͓̽2͓̽0͓̽
I've noticed that many of the thoughts, patterns, and ideas I share don't seem to receive much support. It's made me reflect on how ideas are often judged differently depending on who presents them. In most communities, established voices are given the benefit of the doubt, while newcomers face far more scrutiny even when they're using a clear methodology. Sometimes an original idea gets overlooked, only to gain traction once it's repeated by someone with more recognition. I think ideas should be evaluated on the strength of their analysis, consistency, and predictive value not on the popularity or status of the person presenting them.
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F҈U҈Z҈Z҈Y҈ 4͓̽2͓̽0͓̽
The algorithm probably plays a role to some extent, but I don't think it explains everything. My point isn't about impressions or reach, it's about how ideas are received once people actually see them. I've been in enough communities over the years to recognize certain patterns. Time and time again, I've seen original ideas from lesser known members receive little attention, only for similar ideas to gain traction once they're shared by someone more established. Whether that's due to familiarity, reputation, or social dynamics, I don't know. But it's a pattern I've noticed repeatedly.
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LadyP
LadyP@LadyP5652074923·
@Fuzzy42wenty I think you may find that’s more the algorithm.
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F҈U҈Z҈Z҈Y҈ 4͓̽2͓̽0͓̽
Understood but also I don't think discussing different interpretations is "getting off track." If anything, it's part of the journey. Healthy debate and pattern analysis are how we learn from each other. I know some people don't care about finding the exact location, but many of us do because understanding where we are on the map is part of understanding the journey. It doesn't take away from decoding the symbolism or enjoying the lore, it complements both. Connecting the artwork to its predicted location actually provides additional context that helps explain the symbolism and progression of the posts.
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Not Jon
Not Jon@fuzzy_jon·
@Fuzzy42wenty Understanding what could be slowly brewing is wise imo… main thing is it’s getting to the point where we’re getting off track…. We know the “area” of the post… I’m choosing to focus on what fuzzy is saying and enjoying the journey
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F҈U҈Z҈Z҈Y҈ 4͓̽2͓̽0͓̽
Not to sound egotistical but before I started posting the numbered map predictions, no one really had a clear framework for where we were on the map or where the project appeared to be heading. If you disagree with my interpretation, that's completely fine but at least explain your reasoning. Don't just say, "I think we're here." Why? What patterns are you actually seeing that support your conclusion? What I've noticed is that most people who disagree rarely provide any real explanation. It's easy to crop Fuzzy out of the artwork and place him wherever you feel he belongs, but have you actually spent time identifying recurring patterns across the map before making that call? Or are you simply repeating what someone else suggested? I remember when each new artwork dropped, everyone was constantly guessing our position with very little consistency. The numbered map approach wasn't based on random intuition, it came from identifying recurring themes, visual clues, symbolism, and progression over time. Whether you ultimately agree with my conclusions or not, there is at least a method behind them. My goal isn't to convince everyone that I'm right. My goal is to stop people from being misled by confident claims like, "We're only 6–8 posts away from the finish." Based on what, exactly? What pattern have you recognized? What information or evidence leads you to that conclusion? If you're going to make a prediction, at least explain the reasoning behind it. Sometimes it even feels like a few people intentionally muddy the waters by throwing out baseless interpretations, which only adds more noise to the discussion. And if you're still asking me, "How long?" then I don't think you've fully understood the nature of this game. It's built around patience, observation, and pattern recognition not instant answers or fixed timelines. The people focused on counting down the remaining posts are often overlooking the clues that actually matter.
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F҈U҈Z҈Z҈Y҈ 4͓̽2͓̽0͓̽
I get where you're coming from, and I agree that we shouldn't let this become divisive. At the same time, discussing our position on the map isn't unhealthy in itself, it's part of how some of us analyze the project. I think we can do both, enjoy the mystery and decode each artwork while still trying to understand where we are on the map. Those things aren't mutually exclusive.
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Not Jon
Not Jon@fuzzy_jon·
Yeah I mean we can go back and forth all day and disagree… based off your first post and the sentiment the last couple days it’s not healthy to continue arguing about it… it’s a slow tear in the community imo that could form. I’m just deciding to focus on the post… I couldn’t care less where exactly we are on the map… I believe in fuzzy and the devs behind the project just like I’ve been since day 1 of launch
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F҈U҈Z҈Z҈Y҈ 4͓̽2͓̽0͓̽
@fuzzy_jon I'm not asking anyone to agree with my interpretation. I'm asking people to show their reasoning. If a conclusion comes from patterns identified, I'd genuinely like to see them. We all benefit from better analysis.
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Not Jon
Not Jon@fuzzy_jon·
@Fuzzy42wenty Idc about arguing where exactly we are… we need to enjoy the ride and decode each post. We will get there when we get there
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F҈U҈Z҈Z҈Y҈ 4͓̽2͓̽0͓̽
@fuzzy_jon I agree, good point✊🏼✊🏼 I think understanding what each post is trying to tell us is far more important than obsessing over our exact position on the map.
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Not Jon
Not Jon@fuzzy_jon·
@Fuzzy42wenty Yeah I think everyone is losing the plot tbh… focusing too much exactly where we are in the map and not what each post is trying to tell us…
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