

You've probably heard people talk about "DeFi" the way they talk about "the cloud" — it sounds important, everyone seems to be using it, and nobody explains it in plain language. This edition changes that.
We'll unpack the three core DeFi activities — lending, staking, and swapping — explain why they matter for financial access worldwide, and walk through how Nodle connects to this world starting from the phone in your pocket.
Crypto 101 is an educational series designed to make complex blockchain and decentralized infrastructure concepts accessible to everyone. Each edition explores a specific topic in depth, combining foundational knowledge with practical implementation examples from the Nodle ecosystem.
Most people enter DeFi by purchasing tokens on an exchange. With the Nodle app, the journey begins differently. You install the app, your phone starts contributing Bluetooth connectivity to a global DePIN (Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Network), and you earn NODL for doing so. Think of it like a co-op: you bring a resource, the network uses it for real-world services — IoT data, asset tracking, verified media through Click — and you receive your share of the value created.
Your wallet fills up naturally as you go about your day. From there, a question emerges: what can you actually do with those tokens?
DeFi (Decentralized Finance) recreates traditional financial services using smart contracts instead of banks. Imagine if your savings account, your currency exchange booth, and your local credit union were all replaced by open-source software that anyone could use. That's the basic idea.

You supply tokens to a lending protocol, borrowers put up collateral to take a loan, and the interest they pay flows back to you. If a borrower's collateral drops too far in value, the smart contract automatically liquidates it.
Think of it this way: You lend your lawnmower to a neighbour through an app. They leave a security deposit. You get a rental fee. If they don't return it, the deposit covers you. The app handles everything — no awkward conversations needed.
Staking means committing tokens to a smart contract in exchange for yield. How it works varies across protocols:
Validator staking: You back a validator's honesty with your tokens. If the validator misbehaves, part of your stake gets "slashed." This is how networks like Ethereum stay secure.
Flexible staking: Unstake whenever you want (or receive a tradeable token representing your position), but yields tend to be lower.
Fixed lock-up staking: Commit for a defined period — say 360 days — and earn a higher, more predictable yield in return for giving up access.
Think of it this way: It's the difference between a regular savings account (withdraw anytime, low interest), a notice account (give 30 days' warning, slightly better rate), and a fixed-term deposit (lock it for a year, best rate).
Nodle chose the fixed lock-up path. Its pools use a 360-day commitment — not to secure a blockchain (zkSync and Ethereum handle that), but to reward long-term conviction in the DePIN ecosystem and stabilize circulating supply.
On a DEX (decentralized exchange), you trade one token for another via liquidity pools — shared pots of token pairs that anyone can trade against. Liquidity providers earn a share of every trade fee.
Think of it this way: Imagine a currency-exchange jar at a hostel. Travellers drop in euros and take out dollars. A small fee goes to whoever keeps the jar stocked. No bank, no booth, no opening hours.
Here's something that often gets lost in the jargon: DeFi is fundamentally about access.
Opening a bank account, getting a loan, or investing your savings traditionally requires approval — from a bank, a government, a credit bureau. Billions of people worldwide are excluded from these services because of geography, documentation, or not meeting a minimum balance. DeFi removes those gatekeepers. All you need is a smartphone and an internet connection. The smart contract doesn't care about your passport — it cares about your tokens.
This is where Nodle's model becomes especially powerful. In many parts of the world, people have smartphones but limited banking access. With the Nodle app, that same smartphone becomes a tool to earn digital assets through DePIN participation, then use DeFi services — staking, swapping, and eventually spending — all from a single application. No intermediary required. No bank approval needed.

Once NODL lands in your wallet, three paths open up:
Stake — Lock it in a pool for additional yield.
Swap — Trade it for other tokens on a DEX.
Use — Pay gas fees, run Click missions, and access services across the Nodle ecosystem.
The staking dashboard at the Nodle Portal offers two pools, both with a 360-day lock-up and an estimated ~12% APY.

🐬 Dolphin Pool | 🐳 Whale Pool | |
|---|---|---|
Stake range | 50,000 – 5,000,000 NODL | 5,000,000 – 300,000,000 NODL |
Estimated yield | ~12% APY | ~12% APY |
Lock-up | 360 days | 360 days |
Both pools work the same way — like two lanes at a swimming pool. Same water, same rules, different capacity. Pick the lane that fits your position.
APY (Annual Percentage Yield) is the return you'd earn over a full year. At ~12% APY, staking 100,000 NODL would be expected to produce roughly 12,000 NODL in rewards over 12 months, assuming pool parameters stay constant. APY can shift as the total staked amount changes.
If you pull out before 360 days, your principal is returned but all accumulated rewards are forfeited. Every token of yield earned up to that point is lost. This mechanism encourages genuine long-term participation and keeps the system stable. Don't stake tokens you might need access to within the next year.
DeFi gives you more control — but with that comes responsibility.

Smart contract risk. The NODL staking contracts have been audited by Resonance Security, a specialist firm reviewing Solidity code for vulnerabilities. An audit is like a professional building inspection — it dramatically reduces the chance of structural problems, but no code is ever 100% risk-free.
Market and liquidity risk. Rewards are paid in NODL, not stablecoins. If NODL's price falls during your lock-up, the fiat value of your position could decrease — even though your token count grew. And because tokens are locked for 360 days, you can't react to sudden market moves.
Rule of thumb: Only stake what you're comfortable not touching for a full year.
Nodle's Q1 2026 roadmap outlines two features that push the app closer to becoming a complete financial hub.

In-App Swaps.
Today, swapping NODL means navigating to an external DEX. Soon, users will swap between NODL and other assets directly inside the Nodle app — the same place where they run Click missions and interact with the network. No tab-switching, no friction.
Credit Card Integration.
This feature bridges on-chain balances with everyday spending. Available first through the Nodle Web Portal and later in the app itself, it lets users tap into their digital assets for their daily routines — wherever traditional cards are accepted. NODL becomes part of a practical, daily payment stack — not just a network coordination token.
Together, these features close the loop: earn by contributing connectivity → stake for yield → swap when you need flexibility → spend when life calls for it. All from one app, all in your control.
DeFi has many nuances that can't all be covered in a single blog, but the three main concepts — lending, staking, and swapping — give you a solid foundation for understanding how it all works. With Nodle, you don't need to buy your way in. Your phone earns the tokens. The Portal lets you stake them. In-app swaps will let you trade them. And a credit card will let you spend them.
Take your time, understand the lock-ups and the risks, and make decisions that fit your situation. We'll keep breaking things down — one edition at a time.
Happy Clicking and keep those NODL coming. 🐬🐳
Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always do your own research before making any financial decisions.
Official Nodle Links
APY (Annual Percentage Yield) — The effective annual return on a position, including compounding.
DeFi (Decentralized Finance) — Financial services built on smart contracts instead of banks.
DePIN (Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Network) — A network where people contribute real-world resources and earn tokens in return.
DEX (Decentralized Exchange) — A protocol for swapping tokens via liquidity pools, without a centralized intermediary.
In-App Swaps — Upcoming feature allowing token swaps directly inside the Nodle app.
Lending Protocol — A DeFi app where users supply tokens to earn interest; borrowers take loans against collateral.
Liquidity Pool — Token pairs locked in a smart contract enabling swaps; contributors earn trade fees.
Lock-up Period — The duration staked tokens cannot be moved or withdrawn.
NODL — The native token of the Nodle network, used for gas, staking, services, and the DePIN ecosystem.
Nodle Portal — Web interface at zkclient.nodle.com/staking for managing staking and ecosystem interactions.
You've probably heard people talk about "DeFi" the way they talk about "the cloud" — it sounds important, everyone seems to be using it, and nobody explains it in plain language. This edition changes that.
We'll unpack the three core DeFi activities — lending, staking, and swapping — explain why they matter for financial access worldwide, and walk through how Nodle connects to this world starting from the phone in your pocket.
Crypto 101 is an educational series designed to make complex blockchain and decentralized infrastructure concepts accessible to everyone. Each edition explores a specific topic in depth, combining foundational knowledge with practical implementation examples from the Nodle ecosystem.
Most people enter DeFi by purchasing tokens on an exchange. With the Nodle app, the journey begins differently. You install the app, your phone starts contributing Bluetooth connectivity to a global DePIN (Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Network), and you earn NODL for doing so. Think of it like a co-op: you bring a resource, the network uses it for real-world services — IoT data, asset tracking, verified media through Click — and you receive your share of the value created.
Your wallet fills up naturally as you go about your day. From there, a question emerges: what can you actually do with those tokens?
DeFi (Decentralized Finance) recreates traditional financial services using smart contracts instead of banks. Imagine if your savings account, your currency exchange booth, and your local credit union were all replaced by open-source software that anyone could use. That's the basic idea.

You supply tokens to a lending protocol, borrowers put up collateral to take a loan, and the interest they pay flows back to you. If a borrower's collateral drops too far in value, the smart contract automatically liquidates it.
Think of it this way: You lend your lawnmower to a neighbour through an app. They leave a security deposit. You get a rental fee. If they don't return it, the deposit covers you. The app handles everything — no awkward conversations needed.
Staking means committing tokens to a smart contract in exchange for yield. How it works varies across protocols:
Validator staking: You back a validator's honesty with your tokens. If the validator misbehaves, part of your stake gets "slashed." This is how networks like Ethereum stay secure.
Flexible staking: Unstake whenever you want (or receive a tradeable token representing your position), but yields tend to be lower.
Fixed lock-up staking: Commit for a defined period — say 360 days — and earn a higher, more predictable yield in return for giving up access.
Think of it this way: It's the difference between a regular savings account (withdraw anytime, low interest), a notice account (give 30 days' warning, slightly better rate), and a fixed-term deposit (lock it for a year, best rate).
Nodle chose the fixed lock-up path. Its pools use a 360-day commitment — not to secure a blockchain (zkSync and Ethereum handle that), but to reward long-term conviction in the DePIN ecosystem and stabilize circulating supply.
On a DEX (decentralized exchange), you trade one token for another via liquidity pools — shared pots of token pairs that anyone can trade against. Liquidity providers earn a share of every trade fee.
Think of it this way: Imagine a currency-exchange jar at a hostel. Travellers drop in euros and take out dollars. A small fee goes to whoever keeps the jar stocked. No bank, no booth, no opening hours.
Here's something that often gets lost in the jargon: DeFi is fundamentally about access.
Opening a bank account, getting a loan, or investing your savings traditionally requires approval — from a bank, a government, a credit bureau. Billions of people worldwide are excluded from these services because of geography, documentation, or not meeting a minimum balance. DeFi removes those gatekeepers. All you need is a smartphone and an internet connection. The smart contract doesn't care about your passport — it cares about your tokens.
This is where Nodle's model becomes especially powerful. In many parts of the world, people have smartphones but limited banking access. With the Nodle app, that same smartphone becomes a tool to earn digital assets through DePIN participation, then use DeFi services — staking, swapping, and eventually spending — all from a single application. No intermediary required. No bank approval needed.

Once NODL lands in your wallet, three paths open up:
Stake — Lock it in a pool for additional yield.
Swap — Trade it for other tokens on a DEX.
Use — Pay gas fees, run Click missions, and access services across the Nodle ecosystem.
The staking dashboard at the Nodle Portal offers two pools, both with a 360-day lock-up and an estimated ~12% APY.

🐬 Dolphin Pool | 🐳 Whale Pool | |
|---|---|---|
Stake range | 50,000 – 5,000,000 NODL | 5,000,000 – 300,000,000 NODL |
Estimated yield | ~12% APY | ~12% APY |
Lock-up | 360 days | 360 days |
Both pools work the same way — like two lanes at a swimming pool. Same water, same rules, different capacity. Pick the lane that fits your position.
APY (Annual Percentage Yield) is the return you'd earn over a full year. At ~12% APY, staking 100,000 NODL would be expected to produce roughly 12,000 NODL in rewards over 12 months, assuming pool parameters stay constant. APY can shift as the total staked amount changes.
If you pull out before 360 days, your principal is returned but all accumulated rewards are forfeited. Every token of yield earned up to that point is lost. This mechanism encourages genuine long-term participation and keeps the system stable. Don't stake tokens you might need access to within the next year.
DeFi gives you more control — but with that comes responsibility.

Smart contract risk. The NODL staking contracts have been audited by Resonance Security, a specialist firm reviewing Solidity code for vulnerabilities. An audit is like a professional building inspection — it dramatically reduces the chance of structural problems, but no code is ever 100% risk-free.
Market and liquidity risk. Rewards are paid in NODL, not stablecoins. If NODL's price falls during your lock-up, the fiat value of your position could decrease — even though your token count grew. And because tokens are locked for 360 days, you can't react to sudden market moves.
Rule of thumb: Only stake what you're comfortable not touching for a full year.
Nodle's Q1 2026 roadmap outlines two features that push the app closer to becoming a complete financial hub.

In-App Swaps.
Today, swapping NODL means navigating to an external DEX. Soon, users will swap between NODL and other assets directly inside the Nodle app — the same place where they run Click missions and interact with the network. No tab-switching, no friction.
Credit Card Integration.
This feature bridges on-chain balances with everyday spending. Available first through the Nodle Web Portal and later in the app itself, it lets users tap into their digital assets for their daily routines — wherever traditional cards are accepted. NODL becomes part of a practical, daily payment stack — not just a network coordination token.
Together, these features close the loop: earn by contributing connectivity → stake for yield → swap when you need flexibility → spend when life calls for it. All from one app, all in your control.
DeFi has many nuances that can't all be covered in a single blog, but the three main concepts — lending, staking, and swapping — give you a solid foundation for understanding how it all works. With Nodle, you don't need to buy your way in. Your phone earns the tokens. The Portal lets you stake them. In-app swaps will let you trade them. And a credit card will let you spend them.
Take your time, understand the lock-ups and the risks, and make decisions that fit your situation. We'll keep breaking things down — one edition at a time.
Happy Clicking and keep those NODL coming. 🐬🐳
Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always do your own research before making any financial decisions.
Official Nodle Links
APY (Annual Percentage Yield) — The effective annual return on a position, including compounding.
DeFi (Decentralized Finance) — Financial services built on smart contracts instead of banks.
DePIN (Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Network) — A network where people contribute real-world resources and earn tokens in return.
DEX (Decentralized Exchange) — A protocol for swapping tokens via liquidity pools, without a centralized intermediary.
In-App Swaps — Upcoming feature allowing token swaps directly inside the Nodle app.
Lending Protocol — A DeFi app where users supply tokens to earn interest; borrowers take loans against collateral.
Liquidity Pool — Token pairs locked in a smart contract enabling swaps; contributors earn trade fees.
Lock-up Period — The duration staked tokens cannot be moved or withdrawn.
NODL — The native token of the Nodle network, used for gas, staking, services, and the DePIN ecosystem.
Nodle Portal — Web interface at zkclient.nodle.com/staking for managing staking and ecosystem interactions.
Smart Contract — Self-executing blockchain code that enforces rules automatically.
Smart Contract Audit — Professional security review by a third party to identify code vulnerabilities.
Staking — Committing tokens to a smart contract for a period to earn yield.
Smart Contract — Self-executing blockchain code that enforces rules automatically.
Smart Contract Audit — Professional security review by a third party to identify code vulnerabilities.
Staking — Committing tokens to a smart contract for a period to earn yield.

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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...

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