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The Layer-2 Chain Backed by Coinbase and Ethereum Security - meet Base
Base: The Internet That Belongs to You

Capminal: The AI Agent To Execute Your DeFi Actions
DeFi Simplified With Capminal’s AI Agent

ABOKI – Your Friendly Automated P2P Vendor
With Aboki - Send, Swap, Done all in 30 seconds...


<100 subscribers
<100 subscribers
Ken became a presale hunter in 2025, just like many others.
At the time, presales were trending hard. It felt like every week someone was sharing a big win from getting in early.
A lot of early buyers made good money.
Some made life-changing money.
Projects were also seeing huge interest. Big and small investors rushed to join presales, hoping to secure a spot.
But getting in wasn’t always easy.
There were criteria to meet, forms to fill, communities to join, tasks to complete. Some people really had to grind just to be considered.
And if you finally got in, it felt like a victory.
But was it always profitable?
Not really.
Some presales made people a lot of money.
Others brought heavy losses.
And that’s the part people don’t always talk about.
Now Ken is scrolling again and sees another presale trending.
People are shouting “early gem.”
Someone says it could do 20x.
Another insists the team is solid.
Ken has heard all this before.
Sometimes it works.
Many times it doesn’t.
He doesn’t want to miss a good opportunity.
But he also doesn’t want to lose money again.
If you’ve spent time in crypto, this probably sounds familiar.
Things move fast.
Everyone sounds confident.
But deep down, nobody really knows.
That’s the reality of presales today, even on Base.

So Ken decides to be careful this time.
He starts digging into the project.
First, he visits the project’s website to understand what they claim to be building.
Then he opens their X page to see how they communicate and how people respond to them.
He joins their Telegram to read the chats.
Even looks at the project’s wallet activity on-chain.
He tries to do everything right.
But the more he checks, the more confused he gets.
One person says the team is public and trustworthy.
Another says the contract looks suspicious.
Someone else just keeps repeating “easy 20x".
Now Ken feels stuck between FOMO and FUD.
The real problem isn’t that information is missing.
It’s that information is everywhere, scattered and hard to judge.
Too many opinions.
Too much hype from shillers and callers.
No simple way to compare projects calmly.
Not everyone has hours to deeply research every presale.
And that’s the gap ShidoAI is trying to fill.
ShidoAI is an AI-based tool built to help people look at presales in a more structured and calm way.
In simple terms, it checks different pieces of information around a presale (like contracts, team info, social sentiment, and testnet activity), and turns them into a clear letter grade:
S: Rare, exceptional quality
A: Strong signals overall
B: Solid but incomplete
C: Weak or unproven
D: High risk or almost no meaningful data.
A high grade doesn’t guarantee success. A low grade doesn’t mean failure.
It’s simply a reflection of the information available at that moment.
ShidoAI is meant to be a support tool.
– A research helper.
– A way to reduce emotional decisions and think more clearly.
It doesn’t promise profit.
It doesn’t give price targets.
It doesn’t remove risk.
And it doesn’t tell you “buy this.”
What it does is simpler than that...
It gathers the information it can find about a presale and organizes it, adding structure where things usually feel messy.
Instead of jumping between platforms and opinions, Ken now checks ShidoAI first.
ShidoAI looks at all the information it can find about a project and turns it into a simple score.
If the project gets a B, he doesn’t blindly buy. He still checks the website and other available information. But now he’s focused... he knows what to question first.
Later, another project scores an A. Ken feels more confident investigating it, without panic or FOMO clouding his judgment.
So if the grade is low, he asks more questions.
And if the grade is higher, he still researches.
ShidoAI isn’t making his decisions. It’s just giving him a structured starting point.
Because it’s not a shortcut.
It’s more like a summary of what’s known about the project that helps him ask better questions.
Ken still makes the final call.
But now he isn’t relying only on hype.
ShidoAI uses simple letter grades.
Higher grades mean stronger visible information.
Lower grades mean weaker or limited information.
It’s important to remember:
Grades are snapshots, not predictions.
Low grades can just mean new or quiet projects with not enough information or limited activity.
High grades reflect strong signals, not guaranteed success.
It simply reflects what the AI sees at that time.

ShidoAI works on snapshots.
Because crypto moves fast, a project that looks empty today could have all the right information tomorrow.
So projects can weaken or improve over time.
That’s why ShidoAI updates its evaluation once a week, focusing on the present state, not old data.
Only the latest score is shown publicly, while historical scores remain private.
This keeps the focus on what matters now, not outdated information.
ShidoAI isn’t just a tool, it also has a token system designed to support its ecosystem and long-term growth.
Here’s how it works:
75% Presale – Given to early participants to ensure fair access and engagement.
15% Liquidity – Helps maintain smooth buying and selling, keeping the market healthy.
10% Platform Rewards – Rewards users for engaging with the platform and contributing to its ecosystem.
The goal is to keep distribution fair, liquidity strong, and support ongoing growth of the ShidoAI ecosystem, without complicated mechanics that are hard to understand.
ShidoAI was originally expected to launch through Bapp.fun.

However, according to the founder’s tweet, changes on Bappfun’s side left ShidoAI outside their launchpad scope.
The team says they’re still building and exploring other opportunities.
Early-stage crypto projects often adjust plans. Launchpad changes are not unusual. It's a normal part of building in crypto.
As Base grows, presales are multiplying. More builders, more tokens, more hype.
Not everyone has the time to research deeply.
Not everyone knows which information is trustworthy or what to check.
Tools like ShidoAI help beginners, busy investors, and those who want a second layer of review.
They filter the noise, focus attention on meaningful information, and help users slow down and think... enabling calmer, more informed decisions.
ShidoAI isn’t trying to remove risk from crypto.
That’s impossible.
What it does is make early research less chaotic.
It gives people like Ken a clearer starting point so they don’t get lost in the noise.
It’s a tool for thinking, not a shortcut to presale success.
Sometimes, just having clarity is enough to make better and calmer decisions.
At the end of the day...
It’s still early.
The project is still growing.
Users should always do their own research.
No tool should replace your personal judgment.
But some tools can help you think more clearly.
Follow ShidoAI on Twitter to stay updated.
Written by Huntress
Ken became a presale hunter in 2025, just like many others.
At the time, presales were trending hard. It felt like every week someone was sharing a big win from getting in early.
A lot of early buyers made good money.
Some made life-changing money.
Projects were also seeing huge interest. Big and small investors rushed to join presales, hoping to secure a spot.
But getting in wasn’t always easy.
There were criteria to meet, forms to fill, communities to join, tasks to complete. Some people really had to grind just to be considered.
And if you finally got in, it felt like a victory.
But was it always profitable?
Not really.
Some presales made people a lot of money.
Others brought heavy losses.
And that’s the part people don’t always talk about.
Now Ken is scrolling again and sees another presale trending.
People are shouting “early gem.”
Someone says it could do 20x.
Another insists the team is solid.
Ken has heard all this before.
Sometimes it works.
Many times it doesn’t.
He doesn’t want to miss a good opportunity.
But he also doesn’t want to lose money again.
If you’ve spent time in crypto, this probably sounds familiar.
Things move fast.
Everyone sounds confident.
But deep down, nobody really knows.
That’s the reality of presales today, even on Base.

So Ken decides to be careful this time.
He starts digging into the project.
First, he visits the project’s website to understand what they claim to be building.
Then he opens their X page to see how they communicate and how people respond to them.
He joins their Telegram to read the chats.
Even looks at the project’s wallet activity on-chain.
He tries to do everything right.
But the more he checks, the more confused he gets.
One person says the team is public and trustworthy.
Another says the contract looks suspicious.
Someone else just keeps repeating “easy 20x".
Now Ken feels stuck between FOMO and FUD.
The real problem isn’t that information is missing.
It’s that information is everywhere, scattered and hard to judge.
Too many opinions.
Too much hype from shillers and callers.
No simple way to compare projects calmly.
Not everyone has hours to deeply research every presale.
And that’s the gap ShidoAI is trying to fill.
ShidoAI is an AI-based tool built to help people look at presales in a more structured and calm way.
In simple terms, it checks different pieces of information around a presale (like contracts, team info, social sentiment, and testnet activity), and turns them into a clear letter grade:
S: Rare, exceptional quality
A: Strong signals overall
B: Solid but incomplete
C: Weak or unproven
D: High risk or almost no meaningful data.
A high grade doesn’t guarantee success. A low grade doesn’t mean failure.
It’s simply a reflection of the information available at that moment.
ShidoAI is meant to be a support tool.
– A research helper.
– A way to reduce emotional decisions and think more clearly.
It doesn’t promise profit.
It doesn’t give price targets.
It doesn’t remove risk.
And it doesn’t tell you “buy this.”
What it does is simpler than that...
It gathers the information it can find about a presale and organizes it, adding structure where things usually feel messy.
Instead of jumping between platforms and opinions, Ken now checks ShidoAI first.
ShidoAI looks at all the information it can find about a project and turns it into a simple score.
If the project gets a B, he doesn’t blindly buy. He still checks the website and other available information. But now he’s focused... he knows what to question first.
Later, another project scores an A. Ken feels more confident investigating it, without panic or FOMO clouding his judgment.
So if the grade is low, he asks more questions.
And if the grade is higher, he still researches.
ShidoAI isn’t making his decisions. It’s just giving him a structured starting point.
Because it’s not a shortcut.
It’s more like a summary of what’s known about the project that helps him ask better questions.
Ken still makes the final call.
But now he isn’t relying only on hype.
ShidoAI uses simple letter grades.
Higher grades mean stronger visible information.
Lower grades mean weaker or limited information.
It’s important to remember:
Grades are snapshots, not predictions.
Low grades can just mean new or quiet projects with not enough information or limited activity.
High grades reflect strong signals, not guaranteed success.
It simply reflects what the AI sees at that time.

ShidoAI works on snapshots.
Because crypto moves fast, a project that looks empty today could have all the right information tomorrow.
So projects can weaken or improve over time.
That’s why ShidoAI updates its evaluation once a week, focusing on the present state, not old data.
Only the latest score is shown publicly, while historical scores remain private.
This keeps the focus on what matters now, not outdated information.
ShidoAI isn’t just a tool, it also has a token system designed to support its ecosystem and long-term growth.
Here’s how it works:
75% Presale – Given to early participants to ensure fair access and engagement.
15% Liquidity – Helps maintain smooth buying and selling, keeping the market healthy.
10% Platform Rewards – Rewards users for engaging with the platform and contributing to its ecosystem.
The goal is to keep distribution fair, liquidity strong, and support ongoing growth of the ShidoAI ecosystem, without complicated mechanics that are hard to understand.
ShidoAI was originally expected to launch through Bapp.fun.

However, according to the founder’s tweet, changes on Bappfun’s side left ShidoAI outside their launchpad scope.
The team says they’re still building and exploring other opportunities.
Early-stage crypto projects often adjust plans. Launchpad changes are not unusual. It's a normal part of building in crypto.
As Base grows, presales are multiplying. More builders, more tokens, more hype.
Not everyone has the time to research deeply.
Not everyone knows which information is trustworthy or what to check.
Tools like ShidoAI help beginners, busy investors, and those who want a second layer of review.
They filter the noise, focus attention on meaningful information, and help users slow down and think... enabling calmer, more informed decisions.
ShidoAI isn’t trying to remove risk from crypto.
That’s impossible.
What it does is make early research less chaotic.
It gives people like Ken a clearer starting point so they don’t get lost in the noise.
It’s a tool for thinking, not a shortcut to presale success.
Sometimes, just having clarity is enough to make better and calmer decisions.
At the end of the day...
It’s still early.
The project is still growing.
Users should always do their own research.
No tool should replace your personal judgment.
But some tools can help you think more clearly.
Follow ShidoAI on Twitter to stay updated.
Written by Huntress
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