
Hello fellow Clickstars!
This week's Clicks of the Week move through spaces where devotion, spectacle, ritual, flavour and quiet infrastructure all leave their mark — and then get anchored in the Click archive as certified media, frozen exactly as they were in the split second the shutter dropped. These are the kinds of scenes you might walk past without pausing — an ancient apse glowing gold in the half-light of a March afternoon, a multi-storey mythological creature about to meet its fate in fire, a racehorse moving through a city of towers at the golden hour, a bubbling mariscos pizza still hot from the oven, or a lonely signal hut standing guard over a freight line in the middle of nowhere — but once they are signed with provenance inside the Digital Trust Network, they gain a different kind of gravity.
Settle in and let these five Clicks carry you from the Beuron valley's contemplative silence to Valencia's riotous festival peak, from Mumbai's dawn-lit racecourse to a neighbourhood pizzería in the Buenos Aires suburbs, and finally to the wide, open plains of the American Midwest, where a small metal bungalow keeps the trains honest.
Throughout the week, the team handpicks Clicks to promote the different feeds and Clickstars on social media, like X, Instagram. They get a tip from Nodle for their contributions to the network, Click archive and creativity — if you want to get highlighted by the official accounts, keep on Clicking, yours might be next!
Link your Click app profile to your Nodle app by using the same seedphrase in both apps, set up a username, and claim your clk.eth or nodl.eth handle — this makes it easier to get in touch with your fans and also to receive tips! Support the network and its creators by following the official accounts, sharing, liking and commenting on the posts. Your support is crucial to the network's success!

In this week, the archive grew by 429 Clicks, totaling a staggering 73,033 certified media that got put on the chain. Week by week, contributions all over the world contribute to Nodle — the first Digital Trust Network that empowers creators and enterprises alike through their Android and iOS apps.
Monday, March 16, 2026
Where: Beuron, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Feed: Nature

Social Links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2033630296470655270
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DV9RvIwDqhz
We begin this week with a Click from this Clickstar inside the abbey church of the Benedictine Archabbey of St Martin in Beuron, a monastery tucked into the upper Danube valley in Baden‑Württemberg. Founded in the 11th century and refounded in 1863, Beuron grew into one of the most influential Benedictine houses in Germany and became the birthplace of the Beuron school of sacred art — a movement launched by the brothers Desiderius and Mauritius Lenz, who believed that holy spaces should speak through proportion, stillness and symbol rather than sentiment.
The image opens directly onto the apse, where the inscription Stella Matutina — Morning Star, a Marian title — arcs across the semi-dome above a golden mosaic that pulls every line of sight toward the altar. The curling spirals painted in deep ochre across the curved walls are a signature of the Beuronese vocabulary: they draw their geometry from ancient Egyptian and early Christian sources and are designed to keep the eye moving without ever arriving at a fixed point of distraction. The style deliberately avoids the naturalistic drama of 19th-century academic painting; the figures are stylised and serene, the palette muted and rich at once, because the Beuron artists believed that authentic sacred art must balance what can be seen with what can only be felt. Sitting in one of those wooden pews on a March afternoon, with Latin inscriptions circling overhead and candlelight catching the gold, you understand exactly what they were aiming for: architecture, pattern and light all working together to pull your attention inward and upward at the same time.
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
Where: València, Valencia, Spain
Feed: Festivities

Social Links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2034010834460884994
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DV_-3rNgOIH
FLYERIN keeps the energy going — captured this sculpture in the centre of València on the morning of March 17, 2026, right in the middle of Fallas week, when the city transforms into an open-air gallery of giant monuments made from wood, cardboard and polystyrene. Las Fallas traces its roots all the way back to the Middle Ages, when Valencian carpenters burned their old wooden work stands on March 19 — the feast of Saint Joseph, their patron saint — to mark the end of winter. Over the following centuries, those simple bonfires grew into satirical figures, then into the towering multi-storey monuments we see today, and in 2016 UNESCO recognised Las Fallas as Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.
The Click captures one of the "fallas grandes" competing in the upper sections, assembled by a team of artists who spent the entire previous year designing and building it. Look at what towers overhead: winged mythological figures, horned guardians, musicians, demons and elegantly dressed ladies stacked several storeys into the clear March sky — a controlled chaos of colour that reads like a fever dream from Ovid. Every element is a ninot, each one contributing to a central satirical or fantastical theme that the neighbourhood association chose at the beginning of the construction season. By March 17 the Plantà is complete and the judging is under way, while the city runs on its tight daily calendar: mascletàs thundering out at 14:00 in Plaza del Ayuntamiento, floral processions filling the streets in the afternoon and the Ofrena de Flors building toward its climax. The sculpture stands at its absolute peak of life and colour in this Click — because two nights later, on La Cremà, this same explosion of artistry will end as sparks, smoke and ash.
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
Where: Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
Feed: Sports

Social Links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2034347820925276239
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DWCYHMLgDxb/
From arts and culture, HARSHARYAN takes us somewhere faster and earthier: the coordinates of this Click correspond to Mahalaxmi Racecourse in South Mumbai, a 225-acre horse-racing venue run by the Royal Western India Turf Club, opened in 1883 on reclaimed marshland once known as the Mahalakshmi Flats. The oval track, with its 2.4-kilometre straight chute, is one of the city's largest open green spaces, and it sits ringed by high-rise towers — which is precisely why the skyline lines up so dramatically behind the trees and the training ring in this Click, the modern city framing the ancient relationship between horse and rider as if through a theatrical arch.
The racing season runs from November to April, and the racecourse hosts marquee events like the Indian Derby, which draws Mumbai's sporting elite to the grandstand year after year. But most afternoons the racecourse belongs to the people who work here quietly every day: riders exercising horses, grooms cooling them down, and joggers using the public track during the permitted morning and evening slots. Horse #127 in the frame carries that workaday dignity — no crowd, no commentary, just the animal's weight shifting on the red earth while a groom steadies the bridle and the city glows amber behind the canopy of old trees. The image was caught at that precise in-between moment when the sun drops behind Mumbai's towers and turns the dust and the haze golden, and one of the planet's busiest megacities feels, for a few quiet minutes, surprisingly still.
Thursday, March 19, 2026
Where: Villa Ballester, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina
Feed: Food

Social Links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2034700382358979008
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DWE4LxyALgi
On the other end of the world, COLOR is taking us out to his favourite pizza spot. The coordinates of this Click place it in Villa Ballester, a residential town in the northern suburbs of Buenos Aires where the food scene is built on generations of Italian influence — some two million Italians, many of them Genovese, arrived in Argentina between 1881 and 1920, and the bakers among them brought their dough traditions with them and never quite left. What they built over the following century is a pizza culture unlike anywhere else: thick, airy bases, clouds of mozzarella piled so generously the toppings barely have room to breathe, and a neighbourhood pizzería on nearly every block from Palermo to Villa Ballester.
The pizza in the frame is a casa-style mariscos — mussels still in their half-shells, roasted tomato slices, a blanket of bubbling mozzarella and a generous hand of fresh flat-leaf parsley scattered across the top. It is not the thin Roman style or the crisp Neapolitan disc; it is the Argentine take, closer to a focaccia in spirit, built to share and linger over rather than fold and walk. Seafood pizzas have a long tradition in Río de la Plata cooking, where Italian techniques met the abundance of the Atlantic coast, and a good mariscos pizza in a Buenos Aires suburb on a warm March evening — with something cold just outside the frame — is as honest a celebration of that blended heritage as you will find anywhere.
Friday, March 20, 2026
Where: Rushville, Missouri, United States
Feed: Nature

Social Links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2035055673419899374
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DWHaQXyCEnM
This week closes with an image from what feels like the edge of the map, captured by this Clickstar. The silver building labelled "WEST ARMOUR" is a trackside signal bungalow — the kind of insulated metal cabinet that railroads install alongside their mainlines to house the relay equipment, communication hardware and power supplies that keep wayside signals and track circuits working in every season and weather condition. The name stencilled on the door is a location identifier in the signal system, a geographic anchor in a network of hundreds of similar huts strung along thousands of miles of track, each one a small node in a vast, invisible web of coordination.
The line running past it cuts through some of the most quietly dramatic farmland in the American heartland — bare winter trees, open fields still waiting for spring, and a track that runs arrow-straight toward a horizon that never seems to get any closer. Out here the trains are managed remotely, with dispatchers sitting hundreds of miles away making real-time decisions about spacing, speed and priority, while boxes like West Armour relay the information silently on their behalf. The truck mirror in the foreground, the gravel ballast, the haze on the far horizon — it is an unremarkable scene by any objective measure, and that is exactly its power. The Click caught the quiet dignity of infrastructure: the unglamorous machinery that keeps everything else moving, doing its job perfectly, completely unobserved.
That wraps this edition of Clicks of the Week — five certified Clicks, five local stories, and one shared thread: real places and real moments, captured as-they-happened and turned into verifiable, on-chain records inside the Digital Trust Network. This week took us from the gilded silence of a Benedictine apse to the pyrotechnic chaos of a Valencian street, from a Mumbai racecourse at golden hour to a Buenos Aires kitchen that smells of mussels and melted cheese, and finally to a windswept signal post on the American plains that has probably never been photographed before — and now lives in the archive forever. Week after week, our Clickstars show that authenticity is not a filter but a deliberate act, and that once a moment is signed, stored and surfaced as trusted media, even a makeshift festival structure, a monastery interior, a dusty training ring or a lonely metal hut can outlast the scroll.
Want to be featured next? Keep Clicking, keep signing, and keep showing the world what authentic looks like — one capture at a time.
And please, help us spread the word about Click. Encourage your friends and family to submit their Clicks too — it's becoming the top destination for the best, most reliable media. Every contribution helps us improve our collection and gets great content seen by more people.
Before we forget!

Did you know that you can submit your favourite photos to ClickAI? It will provide feedback on how you can improve your next shots. Simply log into www.clickapp.com with your Click camera via WalletConnect, select your image, and click on AI✨ below your image. With the latest update of the Nodle app, you can submit your favourite Clicks to the AI agent in the app's chat interface. Less friction, more opportunities!
You can then submit it to the AI contest for an entry fee, with the chance to win big if the AI's evaluation is favourable! Curious? Try it out today!

Did this catch your attention? Explore our blog post, Click: Beyond the Filter, to discover how the app powers the ecosystem behind the Digital Trust Network.
Happy Clicking, we can't wait to see what you share!

Nodle bids farewell to Polkadot
The final steps of the migration to ZKsync

Announcing the Creation of the Nodle DAO: A New Era of Inclusive Decentralized Governance
The Nodle Foundation is excited to announce the launch of the Nodle DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization), marking a major step toward decentralizing the Nodle Network and placing its future directly in the hands of its community. The creation of the Nodle DAO introduces a structured framework of Nodle Governance Proposals (NGPs), that anyone with a smartphone can vote on. These proposals will allow the community to have a say in the network’s development, ensuring that its direction re...

Nodle. Click. Agents.
Why decentralized messaging matters more than everIn today’s ever-shifting digital terrain, the struggle for uncensored, verifiable communication is at the heart of personal sovereignty. Nodle has been working on XMTP integration into their apps for months. In June, we released the public beta on iOS, allowing users to connect privately and without a middleman. This experience is now live on Android, enabling our global user base to benefit from private and encrypted chat. This launch of Nodl...
Nodle connects the world by using smartphones as nodes to create the Digital Trust Network. NODL | https://nodle.com

Hello fellow Clickstars!
This week's Clicks of the Week move through spaces where devotion, spectacle, ritual, flavour and quiet infrastructure all leave their mark — and then get anchored in the Click archive as certified media, frozen exactly as they were in the split second the shutter dropped. These are the kinds of scenes you might walk past without pausing — an ancient apse glowing gold in the half-light of a March afternoon, a multi-storey mythological creature about to meet its fate in fire, a racehorse moving through a city of towers at the golden hour, a bubbling mariscos pizza still hot from the oven, or a lonely signal hut standing guard over a freight line in the middle of nowhere — but once they are signed with provenance inside the Digital Trust Network, they gain a different kind of gravity.
Settle in and let these five Clicks carry you from the Beuron valley's contemplative silence to Valencia's riotous festival peak, from Mumbai's dawn-lit racecourse to a neighbourhood pizzería in the Buenos Aires suburbs, and finally to the wide, open plains of the American Midwest, where a small metal bungalow keeps the trains honest.
Throughout the week, the team handpicks Clicks to promote the different feeds and Clickstars on social media, like X, Instagram. They get a tip from Nodle for their contributions to the network, Click archive and creativity — if you want to get highlighted by the official accounts, keep on Clicking, yours might be next!
Link your Click app profile to your Nodle app by using the same seedphrase in both apps, set up a username, and claim your clk.eth or nodl.eth handle — this makes it easier to get in touch with your fans and also to receive tips! Support the network and its creators by following the official accounts, sharing, liking and commenting on the posts. Your support is crucial to the network's success!

In this week, the archive grew by 429 Clicks, totaling a staggering 73,033 certified media that got put on the chain. Week by week, contributions all over the world contribute to Nodle — the first Digital Trust Network that empowers creators and enterprises alike through their Android and iOS apps.
Monday, March 16, 2026
Where: Beuron, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Feed: Nature

Social Links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2033630296470655270
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DV9RvIwDqhz
We begin this week with a Click from this Clickstar inside the abbey church of the Benedictine Archabbey of St Martin in Beuron, a monastery tucked into the upper Danube valley in Baden‑Württemberg. Founded in the 11th century and refounded in 1863, Beuron grew into one of the most influential Benedictine houses in Germany and became the birthplace of the Beuron school of sacred art — a movement launched by the brothers Desiderius and Mauritius Lenz, who believed that holy spaces should speak through proportion, stillness and symbol rather than sentiment.
The image opens directly onto the apse, where the inscription Stella Matutina — Morning Star, a Marian title — arcs across the semi-dome above a golden mosaic that pulls every line of sight toward the altar. The curling spirals painted in deep ochre across the curved walls are a signature of the Beuronese vocabulary: they draw their geometry from ancient Egyptian and early Christian sources and are designed to keep the eye moving without ever arriving at a fixed point of distraction. The style deliberately avoids the naturalistic drama of 19th-century academic painting; the figures are stylised and serene, the palette muted and rich at once, because the Beuron artists believed that authentic sacred art must balance what can be seen with what can only be felt. Sitting in one of those wooden pews on a March afternoon, with Latin inscriptions circling overhead and candlelight catching the gold, you understand exactly what they were aiming for: architecture, pattern and light all working together to pull your attention inward and upward at the same time.
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
Where: València, Valencia, Spain
Feed: Festivities

Social Links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2034010834460884994
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DV_-3rNgOIH
FLYERIN keeps the energy going — captured this sculpture in the centre of València on the morning of March 17, 2026, right in the middle of Fallas week, when the city transforms into an open-air gallery of giant monuments made from wood, cardboard and polystyrene. Las Fallas traces its roots all the way back to the Middle Ages, when Valencian carpenters burned their old wooden work stands on March 19 — the feast of Saint Joseph, their patron saint — to mark the end of winter. Over the following centuries, those simple bonfires grew into satirical figures, then into the towering multi-storey monuments we see today, and in 2016 UNESCO recognised Las Fallas as Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.
The Click captures one of the "fallas grandes" competing in the upper sections, assembled by a team of artists who spent the entire previous year designing and building it. Look at what towers overhead: winged mythological figures, horned guardians, musicians, demons and elegantly dressed ladies stacked several storeys into the clear March sky — a controlled chaos of colour that reads like a fever dream from Ovid. Every element is a ninot, each one contributing to a central satirical or fantastical theme that the neighbourhood association chose at the beginning of the construction season. By March 17 the Plantà is complete and the judging is under way, while the city runs on its tight daily calendar: mascletàs thundering out at 14:00 in Plaza del Ayuntamiento, floral processions filling the streets in the afternoon and the Ofrena de Flors building toward its climax. The sculpture stands at its absolute peak of life and colour in this Click — because two nights later, on La Cremà, this same explosion of artistry will end as sparks, smoke and ash.
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
Where: Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
Feed: Sports

Social Links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2034347820925276239
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DWCYHMLgDxb/
From arts and culture, HARSHARYAN takes us somewhere faster and earthier: the coordinates of this Click correspond to Mahalaxmi Racecourse in South Mumbai, a 225-acre horse-racing venue run by the Royal Western India Turf Club, opened in 1883 on reclaimed marshland once known as the Mahalakshmi Flats. The oval track, with its 2.4-kilometre straight chute, is one of the city's largest open green spaces, and it sits ringed by high-rise towers — which is precisely why the skyline lines up so dramatically behind the trees and the training ring in this Click, the modern city framing the ancient relationship between horse and rider as if through a theatrical arch.
The racing season runs from November to April, and the racecourse hosts marquee events like the Indian Derby, which draws Mumbai's sporting elite to the grandstand year after year. But most afternoons the racecourse belongs to the people who work here quietly every day: riders exercising horses, grooms cooling them down, and joggers using the public track during the permitted morning and evening slots. Horse #127 in the frame carries that workaday dignity — no crowd, no commentary, just the animal's weight shifting on the red earth while a groom steadies the bridle and the city glows amber behind the canopy of old trees. The image was caught at that precise in-between moment when the sun drops behind Mumbai's towers and turns the dust and the haze golden, and one of the planet's busiest megacities feels, for a few quiet minutes, surprisingly still.
Thursday, March 19, 2026
Where: Villa Ballester, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina
Feed: Food

Social Links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2034700382358979008
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DWE4LxyALgi
On the other end of the world, COLOR is taking us out to his favourite pizza spot. The coordinates of this Click place it in Villa Ballester, a residential town in the northern suburbs of Buenos Aires where the food scene is built on generations of Italian influence — some two million Italians, many of them Genovese, arrived in Argentina between 1881 and 1920, and the bakers among them brought their dough traditions with them and never quite left. What they built over the following century is a pizza culture unlike anywhere else: thick, airy bases, clouds of mozzarella piled so generously the toppings barely have room to breathe, and a neighbourhood pizzería on nearly every block from Palermo to Villa Ballester.
The pizza in the frame is a casa-style mariscos — mussels still in their half-shells, roasted tomato slices, a blanket of bubbling mozzarella and a generous hand of fresh flat-leaf parsley scattered across the top. It is not the thin Roman style or the crisp Neapolitan disc; it is the Argentine take, closer to a focaccia in spirit, built to share and linger over rather than fold and walk. Seafood pizzas have a long tradition in Río de la Plata cooking, where Italian techniques met the abundance of the Atlantic coast, and a good mariscos pizza in a Buenos Aires suburb on a warm March evening — with something cold just outside the frame — is as honest a celebration of that blended heritage as you will find anywhere.
Friday, March 20, 2026
Where: Rushville, Missouri, United States
Feed: Nature

Social Links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2035055673419899374
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DWHaQXyCEnM
This week closes with an image from what feels like the edge of the map, captured by this Clickstar. The silver building labelled "WEST ARMOUR" is a trackside signal bungalow — the kind of insulated metal cabinet that railroads install alongside their mainlines to house the relay equipment, communication hardware and power supplies that keep wayside signals and track circuits working in every season and weather condition. The name stencilled on the door is a location identifier in the signal system, a geographic anchor in a network of hundreds of similar huts strung along thousands of miles of track, each one a small node in a vast, invisible web of coordination.
The line running past it cuts through some of the most quietly dramatic farmland in the American heartland — bare winter trees, open fields still waiting for spring, and a track that runs arrow-straight toward a horizon that never seems to get any closer. Out here the trains are managed remotely, with dispatchers sitting hundreds of miles away making real-time decisions about spacing, speed and priority, while boxes like West Armour relay the information silently on their behalf. The truck mirror in the foreground, the gravel ballast, the haze on the far horizon — it is an unremarkable scene by any objective measure, and that is exactly its power. The Click caught the quiet dignity of infrastructure: the unglamorous machinery that keeps everything else moving, doing its job perfectly, completely unobserved.
That wraps this edition of Clicks of the Week — five certified Clicks, five local stories, and one shared thread: real places and real moments, captured as-they-happened and turned into verifiable, on-chain records inside the Digital Trust Network. This week took us from the gilded silence of a Benedictine apse to the pyrotechnic chaos of a Valencian street, from a Mumbai racecourse at golden hour to a Buenos Aires kitchen that smells of mussels and melted cheese, and finally to a windswept signal post on the American plains that has probably never been photographed before — and now lives in the archive forever. Week after week, our Clickstars show that authenticity is not a filter but a deliberate act, and that once a moment is signed, stored and surfaced as trusted media, even a makeshift festival structure, a monastery interior, a dusty training ring or a lonely metal hut can outlast the scroll.
Want to be featured next? Keep Clicking, keep signing, and keep showing the world what authentic looks like — one capture at a time.
And please, help us spread the word about Click. Encourage your friends and family to submit their Clicks too — it's becoming the top destination for the best, most reliable media. Every contribution helps us improve our collection and gets great content seen by more people.
Before we forget!

Did you know that you can submit your favourite photos to ClickAI? It will provide feedback on how you can improve your next shots. Simply log into www.clickapp.com with your Click camera via WalletConnect, select your image, and click on AI✨ below your image. With the latest update of the Nodle app, you can submit your favourite Clicks to the AI agent in the app's chat interface. Less friction, more opportunities!
You can then submit it to the AI contest for an entry fee, with the chance to win big if the AI's evaluation is favourable! Curious? Try it out today!

Did this catch your attention? Explore our blog post, Click: Beyond the Filter, to discover how the app powers the ecosystem behind the Digital Trust Network.
Happy Clicking, we can't wait to see what you share!

Nodle bids farewell to Polkadot
The final steps of the migration to ZKsync

Announcing the Creation of the Nodle DAO: A New Era of Inclusive Decentralized Governance
The Nodle Foundation is excited to announce the launch of the Nodle DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization), marking a major step toward decentralizing the Nodle Network and placing its future directly in the hands of its community. The creation of the Nodle DAO introduces a structured framework of Nodle Governance Proposals (NGPs), that anyone with a smartphone can vote on. These proposals will allow the community to have a say in the network’s development, ensuring that its direction re...

Nodle. Click. Agents.
Why decentralized messaging matters more than everIn today’s ever-shifting digital terrain, the struggle for uncensored, verifiable communication is at the heart of personal sovereignty. Nodle has been working on XMTP integration into their apps for months. In June, we released the public beta on iOS, allowing users to connect privately and without a middleman. This experience is now live on Android, enabling our global user base to benefit from private and encrypted chat. This launch of Nodl...
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Nodle connects the world by using smartphones as nodes to create the Digital Trust Network. NODL | https://nodle.com

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