
Information you need or don't need about web 3 - 15
💥 The Biggest Losses in Crypto History Several major events have caused massive financial damage, shaken investor confidence, and reshaped the crypto landscape. Here are some of the most notable ones: 🔥 1. Mt. Gox Hack (2014) Loss: ~850,000 BTC (worth billions of dollars today) What happened? At the time, Mt. Gox was the largest Bitcoin exchange. It was hacked and eventually went bankrupt. Impact: A huge blow to trust in Bitcoin. Prices plummeted. 🔥 2. Terra / LUNA Collapse (2022) Loss: Be...

Information you need or don't need about web 3 - 1
BTC vs ETH Inflation Bitcoin (BTC) Maximum supply: 21 million BTC Current supply increase: Bitcoin block rewards (new BTC issuance) halve approximately every 4 years (“halving”) Annual supply increase as of 2025: Around 1.7% Inflation trend: Decreasing over time because block rewards diminish. By around 2140, all BTC will be mined, and inflation will approach 0% Ethereum (ETH) Maximum supply: Unlimited (theoretically no upper limit) Supply increase: With Ethereum 2.0 and EIP-1559, a “burn mec...

Information you need or don't need about web 3 - 11
90% of “Flash Loan” attacks are not hacks in the technical sense, but rather actions carried out within the rules of the smart contract system itself. --- 📌 What does this mean? A flash loan allows users to borrow funds without collateral as long as the loan is borrowed and repaid within the same transaction block. The system prevents funds from being withdrawn before the transaction is completed. However, malicious actors can exploit this mechanism by manipulating price feeds or market dyna...
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Information you need or don't need about web 3 - 15
💥 The Biggest Losses in Crypto History Several major events have caused massive financial damage, shaken investor confidence, and reshaped the crypto landscape. Here are some of the most notable ones: 🔥 1. Mt. Gox Hack (2014) Loss: ~850,000 BTC (worth billions of dollars today) What happened? At the time, Mt. Gox was the largest Bitcoin exchange. It was hacked and eventually went bankrupt. Impact: A huge blow to trust in Bitcoin. Prices plummeted. 🔥 2. Terra / LUNA Collapse (2022) Loss: Be...

Information you need or don't need about web 3 - 1
BTC vs ETH Inflation Bitcoin (BTC) Maximum supply: 21 million BTC Current supply increase: Bitcoin block rewards (new BTC issuance) halve approximately every 4 years (“halving”) Annual supply increase as of 2025: Around 1.7% Inflation trend: Decreasing over time because block rewards diminish. By around 2140, all BTC will be mined, and inflation will approach 0% Ethereum (ETH) Maximum supply: Unlimited (theoretically no upper limit) Supply increase: With Ethereum 2.0 and EIP-1559, a “burn mec...

Information you need or don't need about web 3 - 11
90% of “Flash Loan” attacks are not hacks in the technical sense, but rather actions carried out within the rules of the smart contract system itself. --- 📌 What does this mean? A flash loan allows users to borrow funds without collateral as long as the loan is borrowed and repaid within the same transaction block. The system prevents funds from being withdrawn before the transaction is completed. However, malicious actors can exploit this mechanism by manipulating price feeds or market dyna...


Legion: Early-Stage Token Launches, Rebuilt for the Next Cycle
In the past few years, the way crypto projects launch their tokens has barely evolved. Early access is often reserved for a small circle of funds, while everyday users — the people who actually build and sustain communities — are left watching from the sidelines. Legion steps into this gap with a simple but ambitious idea: early-stage access should be earned through contribution, not gatekept by capital.
Legion introduces a launch framework where participants are evaluated through a merit-based scoring system called the Legion Score. Instead of measuring only financial power, it looks at what users actually bring to the table: on-chain history, community participation, developer activity, social footprint, and long-term alignment. This creates a far more meaningful link between projects and the people who support them.
What makes Legion particularly compelling is its regulatory-first architecture. Designed with MiCA compliance and proper identity verification, the platform aims to eliminate the chaos and opacity that plagued early ICOs. For projects, this means a safer and more predictable launch environment. For users, it means cleaner participation, lower sybil risk, and access that feels earned rather than arbitrary.
At the same time, Legion gives projects flexibility: pre-TGE rounds, post-TGE sales, curated investor cohorts, and customizable allocation models. Whether a team wants to build a developer-heavy early community or reward long-term on-chain contributors, Legion offers a structured path to do it.
Of course, big visions bring big questions. How transparent will the Legion Score become? Will projects commit to building with long-term contributors rather than short-term speculators? These are challenges every merit-based ecosystem must navigate.
But one thing is clear: Legion is pushing the early-stage token market toward a more fair, compliant, and community-aligned future. As the next wave of Web3 launches approaches, platforms like this may become the new foundation — where opportunity flows not just to the wealthy, but to the people who contribute real value.
Legion: Early-Stage Token Launches, Rebuilt for the Next Cycle
In the past few years, the way crypto projects launch their tokens has barely evolved. Early access is often reserved for a small circle of funds, while everyday users — the people who actually build and sustain communities — are left watching from the sidelines. Legion steps into this gap with a simple but ambitious idea: early-stage access should be earned through contribution, not gatekept by capital.
Legion introduces a launch framework where participants are evaluated through a merit-based scoring system called the Legion Score. Instead of measuring only financial power, it looks at what users actually bring to the table: on-chain history, community participation, developer activity, social footprint, and long-term alignment. This creates a far more meaningful link between projects and the people who support them.
What makes Legion particularly compelling is its regulatory-first architecture. Designed with MiCA compliance and proper identity verification, the platform aims to eliminate the chaos and opacity that plagued early ICOs. For projects, this means a safer and more predictable launch environment. For users, it means cleaner participation, lower sybil risk, and access that feels earned rather than arbitrary.
At the same time, Legion gives projects flexibility: pre-TGE rounds, post-TGE sales, curated investor cohorts, and customizable allocation models. Whether a team wants to build a developer-heavy early community or reward long-term on-chain contributors, Legion offers a structured path to do it.
Of course, big visions bring big questions. How transparent will the Legion Score become? Will projects commit to building with long-term contributors rather than short-term speculators? These are challenges every merit-based ecosystem must navigate.
But one thing is clear: Legion is pushing the early-stage token market toward a more fair, compliant, and community-aligned future. As the next wave of Web3 launches approaches, platforms like this may become the new foundation — where opportunity flows not just to the wealthy, but to the people who contribute real value.
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I just published a quick read for @legiondotcc at @paragraph