Front-end dev turned Web3 storyteller. Breaking down wallets, smart contracts & crypto UX. Find me on X → @0xhenrydev
Front-end dev turned Web3 storyteller. Breaking down wallets, smart contracts & crypto UX. Find me on X → @0xhenrydev

Subscribe to @0xhenrydev

Subscribe to @0xhenrydev
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
<100 subscribers
<100 subscribers


When newcomers step into Web3, many rush straight into the token market. The temptation is understandable: thousands of coins, wild price swings, and the promise of overnight wealth. But this mindset often leads to disappointment. If you treat Web3 as a casino, you will eventually pay the house.
A better way to think about investment is to flip the perspective. Instead of starting with tokens, start with the chains.
Every blockchain is its own economy. Ethereum, Solana, Avalanche, Cosmos, Sui, Aptos — each has:
A base token that secures the network and represents ownership in its future.
A developer ecosystem that builds apps, protocols, and infrastructure.
A community that either thrives or stagnates.
If the chain itself cannot sustain growth, then no token built on top of it will survive for long. Just as no company can thrive in a collapsing country, no dApp can flourish on a dying chain.
Choosing tokens randomly out of thousands is like buying lottery tickets. The overwhelming majority are air projects — tokens issued without purpose, backed only by hype and narratives. They may pump in the short term, but with no foundation, they crash just as fast.
This is the core mistake of “token-first” thinking. You end up betting on shadows, not substance.
Instead, evaluate chains first:
Technology: Does the chain bring meaningful improvements (scalability, security, developer experience)?
Community: Is there an active, growing user and developer base?
Ecosystem: Are there real applications people want to use?
Tokenomics: Does the native token have sustainable utility (security, staking, fees)?
Only when these fundamentals align should you then look downstream into the tokens within that chain’s ecosystem.

Tokens are reflections of the underlying chain’s strength. The more valuable the chain becomes, the more opportunities its ecosystem tokens have to grow. That’s why chain growth is the base layer of value creation in Web3.
If you’re here for quick gains, Web3 will eat you alive. But if you look beyond the noise — at chains, infrastructure, and the communities building them — you’ll see the foundation for long-term value.
Invest in chains, not in shadows. From chains, real value flows.
When newcomers step into Web3, many rush straight into the token market. The temptation is understandable: thousands of coins, wild price swings, and the promise of overnight wealth. But this mindset often leads to disappointment. If you treat Web3 as a casino, you will eventually pay the house.
A better way to think about investment is to flip the perspective. Instead of starting with tokens, start with the chains.
Every blockchain is its own economy. Ethereum, Solana, Avalanche, Cosmos, Sui, Aptos — each has:
A base token that secures the network and represents ownership in its future.
A developer ecosystem that builds apps, protocols, and infrastructure.
A community that either thrives or stagnates.
If the chain itself cannot sustain growth, then no token built on top of it will survive for long. Just as no company can thrive in a collapsing country, no dApp can flourish on a dying chain.
Choosing tokens randomly out of thousands is like buying lottery tickets. The overwhelming majority are air projects — tokens issued without purpose, backed only by hype and narratives. They may pump in the short term, but with no foundation, they crash just as fast.
This is the core mistake of “token-first” thinking. You end up betting on shadows, not substance.
Instead, evaluate chains first:
Technology: Does the chain bring meaningful improvements (scalability, security, developer experience)?
Community: Is there an active, growing user and developer base?
Ecosystem: Are there real applications people want to use?
Tokenomics: Does the native token have sustainable utility (security, staking, fees)?
Only when these fundamentals align should you then look downstream into the tokens within that chain’s ecosystem.

Tokens are reflections of the underlying chain’s strength. The more valuable the chain becomes, the more opportunities its ecosystem tokens have to grow. That’s why chain growth is the base layer of value creation in Web3.
If you’re here for quick gains, Web3 will eat you alive. But if you look beyond the noise — at chains, infrastructure, and the communities building them — you’ll see the foundation for long-term value.
Invest in chains, not in shadows. From chains, real value flows.
No activity yet