Remember when Hyperliquid NFTs went absolutely wild? That era was something else—I was getting offers left and right. But there's one proposal I'll never forget.
They wanted me to front as the founder of some project. Simple gig: promote during the mint, pocket $40k after launch. Sounds tempting, right?
I turned it down flat.
Here's the thing—and this matters more than any paycheck—I couldn't look myself in the mirror knowing I helped scam people. The NFT space is already flooded with rug pulls and fake narratives. Adding my credibility to another scheme? That's a hard pass.
Lots of people will jump at that kind of money. But when the market depends on trust, and trust gets weaponized, we all lose. The real value isn't in one quick payment—it's in not becoming part of the problem.
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UncommonNPC
· 2h ago
Hey, this guy's conscience is worth something. Not even $40,000 can move him.
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GigaBrainAnon
· 01-09 10:01
ngl this is what true diamond hands are, not just holding coins but holding onto your conscience
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WalletDivorcer
· 01-09 03:14
Hey, this kind-hearted advice is really rare; most people have already taken it.
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SurvivorshipBias
· 01-08 17:02
Awesome, this is true professional integrity.
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SerRugResistant
· 01-08 16:44
Speaking of which, $40,000 can really break many people's defenses, but seeing how determined you are, I still have to give you some respect.
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ShadowStaker
· 01-08 16:39
nah this is exactly why most validators ghost projects mid-cycle... when the incentive structure breaks, everyone becomes a potential rug. $40k's chump change compared to whatever happens when your reputation tanks the whole validator set's credibility metrics tbh
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RektCoaster
· 01-08 16:32
Really, I am convinced by this choice. How many people have already compromised, and are still pretending?
Remember when Hyperliquid NFTs went absolutely wild? That era was something else—I was getting offers left and right. But there's one proposal I'll never forget.
They wanted me to front as the founder of some project. Simple gig: promote during the mint, pocket $40k after launch. Sounds tempting, right?
I turned it down flat.
Here's the thing—and this matters more than any paycheck—I couldn't look myself in the mirror knowing I helped scam people. The NFT space is already flooded with rug pulls and fake narratives. Adding my credibility to another scheme? That's a hard pass.
Lots of people will jump at that kind of money. But when the market depends on trust, and trust gets weaponized, we all lose. The real value isn't in one quick payment—it's in not becoming part of the problem.