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StickrNet is a launchpad for content engines (subreddit-style communities).
Each community has a community coin and a stream of posts called Stickers (NFTs).
Stickers are priced in USDC. Curators pay USDC to collect them.
Creators earn USDC when their Stickers get collected.
Owning Stickers lets you mine the community coin.
More valuable Stickers mine more of the community coin.
Sticker prices follow a falling-price curve (Dutch auction), so everything is always collectible.
StickrNet is a launchpad for content engines: onchain communities with their own coin and their own content stream. Creators post Stickers (content NFTs). Curators collect Stickers with USDC. Creators earn USDC when people collect their work. Curators want to own Stickers because Sticker ownership mines the community coin, and the Stickers with the most value mine the most.
The goal is a living community feed that feels like a subreddit: a page where the “best” posts keep surfacing because people keep collecting them, holding them, and competing for them.
Not “best” because of likes. Best because people are willing to pay USDC to own them and mine with them.
Each Sticker is a single post as an NFT (one post, one owner).
Stickers are priced in USDC.
A Sticker can always be collected from the current owner at the current price.
The price resets higher after each collect, then decays toward $0 over a longer window (commonly ~30 days).
When a Sticker is collected, the USDC payment is split by the community’s rules, and the creator receives a cut in USDC. The point is simple: if you make posts people want, you get paid in cash.
Owning Stickers is how you mine.
If you own Stickers in a community, you mine that community’s coin.
Your mining rate scales with the value of the Stickers you own.
If your Stickers are the ones people keep collecting at higher prices, you mine more.
This is why curation matters: curators aren’t just browsing — they’re choosing what to own because ownership is what produces the coin.
Imagine someone launches a community coin called PEPE on StickrNet.
Creators start posting PEPE memes as Stickers:
“Pepe reaction #12”
“Pepe edit pack”
“Pepe comic strip”
Each post is a Sticker with a USDC price that decays over time.
If a meme hits, creators get paid in USDC when curators collect it. If it keeps getting collected again and again, the creator keeps getting paid again and again.
Curators watch the feed and collect the memes they think will matter.
Why? Because owning Stickers mines PEPE.
A curator collects a PEPE meme Sticker for $40 USDC.
That Sticker now gives them mining weight in the PEPE community.
If the meme becomes a community classic and keeps getting collected at higher prices, the Sticker stays “high value,” and whoever owns it mines more PEPE.
So curators are rewarded for taste:
find good memes early
collect them before they get expensive
hold them to mine more PEPE
if someone else wants it, they have to pay to take it
Over time, the feed turns into something close to a subreddit front page:
the memes people don’t care about drift toward $0 and get ignored
the memes people care about keep getting collected, repriced, and fought over
those “fought over” Stickers end up being the culture markers of the community
Coin holders are betting that this culture loop keeps running. Creators are paid in USDC when they add to it. Curators mine more PEPE when they own the posts that define it.
Not a promise of profit.
If nobody collects, creators won’t earn much and mining won’t be competitive.
Sticker “value” depends on what people pay, not what’s “objectively good.”
Moderation (if enabled) is a trust surface for that community.
Why price Stickers in USDC?
So creators earn cash when their work gets collected.
Why would I collect a Sticker?
To mine the community coin. More valuable Stickers mine more.
How does the “curation” part happen?
Curators collect and hold the posts they think will matter. The feed reflects what people are willing to pay to own.

StickrNet is a launchpad for content engines (subreddit-style communities).
Each community has a community coin and a stream of posts called Stickers (NFTs).
Stickers are priced in USDC. Curators pay USDC to collect them.
Creators earn USDC when their Stickers get collected.
Owning Stickers lets you mine the community coin.
More valuable Stickers mine more of the community coin.
Sticker prices follow a falling-price curve (Dutch auction), so everything is always collectible.
StickrNet is a launchpad for content engines: onchain communities with their own coin and their own content stream. Creators post Stickers (content NFTs). Curators collect Stickers with USDC. Creators earn USDC when people collect their work. Curators want to own Stickers because Sticker ownership mines the community coin, and the Stickers with the most value mine the most.
The goal is a living community feed that feels like a subreddit: a page where the “best” posts keep surfacing because people keep collecting them, holding them, and competing for them.
Not “best” because of likes. Best because people are willing to pay USDC to own them and mine with them.
Each Sticker is a single post as an NFT (one post, one owner).
Stickers are priced in USDC.
A Sticker can always be collected from the current owner at the current price.
The price resets higher after each collect, then decays toward $0 over a longer window (commonly ~30 days).
When a Sticker is collected, the USDC payment is split by the community’s rules, and the creator receives a cut in USDC. The point is simple: if you make posts people want, you get paid in cash.
Owning Stickers is how you mine.
If you own Stickers in a community, you mine that community’s coin.
Your mining rate scales with the value of the Stickers you own.
If your Stickers are the ones people keep collecting at higher prices, you mine more.
This is why curation matters: curators aren’t just browsing — they’re choosing what to own because ownership is what produces the coin.
Imagine someone launches a community coin called PEPE on StickrNet.
Creators start posting PEPE memes as Stickers:
“Pepe reaction #12”
“Pepe edit pack”
“Pepe comic strip”
Each post is a Sticker with a USDC price that decays over time.
If a meme hits, creators get paid in USDC when curators collect it. If it keeps getting collected again and again, the creator keeps getting paid again and again.
Curators watch the feed and collect the memes they think will matter.
Why? Because owning Stickers mines PEPE.
A curator collects a PEPE meme Sticker for $40 USDC.
That Sticker now gives them mining weight in the PEPE community.
If the meme becomes a community classic and keeps getting collected at higher prices, the Sticker stays “high value,” and whoever owns it mines more PEPE.
So curators are rewarded for taste:
find good memes early
collect them before they get expensive
hold them to mine more PEPE
if someone else wants it, they have to pay to take it
Over time, the feed turns into something close to a subreddit front page:
the memes people don’t care about drift toward $0 and get ignored
the memes people care about keep getting collected, repriced, and fought over
those “fought over” Stickers end up being the culture markers of the community
Coin holders are betting that this culture loop keeps running. Creators are paid in USDC when they add to it. Curators mine more PEPE when they own the posts that define it.
Not a promise of profit.
If nobody collects, creators won’t earn much and mining won’t be competitive.
Sticker “value” depends on what people pay, not what’s “objectively good.”
Moderation (if enabled) is a trust surface for that community.
Why price Stickers in USDC?
So creators earn cash when their work gets collected.
Why would I collect a Sticker?
To mine the community coin. More valuable Stickers mine more.
How does the “curation” part happen?
Curators collect and hold the posts they think will matter. The feed reflects what people are willing to pay to own.
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