🌊YAPline SPECIAL - Why & How to build your social capital (X) in web3
The Spaces centered on two threads: ethics and tactics of growing social capital on Crypto Twitter (CT), and a dense rundown of current InfoFi/TGE opportunities. Chill opened with a candid riff on engagement culture, segueing into a heated debrief of a fake “exposé” post about Kaito. Dibs drew a hard line between shitposting and defamation, warning of real legal exposure; Bandit urged open systems but noted reputational damage and the signal it sends to small accounts. The panel pivoted to practical growth: authenticity over mass glazing, novelty, respectful contrarian takes, pin/highlights hygiene, list-driven reply networking, and “make it fun” to sustain the grind. Andres and Andrew stressed consistency and not asking for handouts; R2/Arto warned against picking sides early and chasing outrage. R2 delivered a detailed InfoFi update (Turtle, Portal to Bitcoin, Wallchain/Limitless, Count Network vesting, Polygon Yappers, OG Lab, Morph, Open Ledger). Risk management was a throughline: do not borrow to farm, protect family, manage emotions, build a bankroll, and blend on-chain with social. Prediction markets (Polymarket et al.) were flagged as a sticky growth niche and content mine. The hosts also announced a format/time shift next week, adding Dibs’ on-chain “how to make money” segment and project guests (AERA, Xi).
Space overview
- Host: Chill ("Yap Line" host). Co-hosts: R2 (often called Arto/Artu) and Dibs/Deeps.
- Featured speakers and frequent contributors: Bandit, Andres, Andrew, Western, Kryptonite, Benjamin, Chris (aka Trap), Gabby, Crypto Patra, among others.
- Core themes: misinformation vs satire ethics on CT (crypto Twitter), how to grow social capital/accounts in InfoFi, risk management and expectations around campaigns/airdrops/TGEs, a detailed campaign/TGE update run-through, and the rising prediction markets narrative.
The catalyst: last night’s misinformation/defamation post
- Dibs’ position: drew a clear line between ship posting and defamation. Emphasized the legal reality: subpoenas can compel platforms to provide KYC/IP; online actions have consequences. The subsequent “all my tweets are fake” bio edit does not retroactively sanitize defamation.
- Chill’s view: conflicted. Considered it “a little too much,” and more surprised by the community’s reaction and eagerness to believe a first “gotcha.” Sees a lesson for Kaito: moments like these surface latent critics; how platforms and communities respond matters.
- Bandit’s take: ship post, don’t step on toes. Engagement with negative sentiment is low-quality capital: 10k views where everyone hates you is worth less than 10k views with net positive sentiment. Short-term spikes can damage long-term equity.
- Concerns for smaller accounts (Dibs): high-traction rage-bait can signal the wrong incentives to strivers chasing yaps/leaderboards. The post was crafted to be “just believable enough”—so “it was obviously fake” is not a defense.
- Ethical boundary: multiple speakers (Bandit, Andrew, Chill, Andres) stressed moderation and context for satire, especially when impersonation/“lying” tweets are involved. Use with people who understand your style; don’t normalize hoaxes framed as exposés.
What social capital do you want to build?
- Chill: different routes—“dumb road” (controversial, trollish, high-risk) vs “smart road” (value/vertical leadership); hybrids exist. Your lane determines opportunities and resilience.
- Bandit: long-term goodwill matters more than raw impressions. Don’t optimize pure virality at the cost of reputation.
- Andres: persistent, high-effort participation attracts support from the right groups over time. Don’t nag/ask for handouts; show effort where it counts and support tends to follow.
- Andrew: keep pushing in the right circles; people gravitate to consistent, focused grinders who “get after it.”
Practical growth playbook (what actually works)
- Gamify and have fun
- Bandit and Dibs: if it’s fun, you don’t need to brute-force “discipline.” Turn growth into a game (lists, reply races, being first in comments, little “challenges”).
- Chill: “fun” varies. Some enjoy being highly organized/strategic; others thrive on banter. Find your authentic fun and double down.
- Authenticity > overthinking
- Bandit: stop perfecting replies; post what comes naturally. Some you think are “bad” hit, and some you think are “bangers” flop—embrace variance.
- Andrew: novelty is the true “better.” Don’t recycle takes; say new things or say things in new ways. Novelty is what people haven’t seen yet.
- Replies, lists, and networking
- Build targeted lists by niche and by people you want to connect with.
- Don’t force “300 replies spread across X accounts” mechanically—reply where you can add natural value. Quality comes from fit with the tweet and your voice.
- Contrarian but respectful takes often outperform glazing. Push back with arguments instead of “you’re the best” fluff.
- Use X features smartly: pin your best evergreen resource, curate Highlights so newcomers see your range quickly.
- Content strategy signals
- Don’t look like a campaign shill. If you talk about projects, blend them within your broader niche expertise so it reads as your take, not an ad.
- Mix formats: short takes, threads, quick visuals/screens, and (when comfortable) personal/IRL elements. Being docs/face-forward can supercharge trust in an AI-heavy future.
Boundaries: satire, impersonation, and “lying tweets”
- Use satire in moderation and within relationships that understand the bit (Andres). Cold “lying tweets” are risky and often misread. Written sarcasm is easy to misinterpret across language/culture barriers.
- Don’t build your brand on hoaxes framed as exposés. Short-term clout damages long-term credibility, hurts others, and can cross into defamation.
Balancing IRL and Web3; risk and emotional control
- R2: set a safe runway and protect family finances before going all-in on social capital. Expect a slow grind; don’t borrow against family security to farm.
- Dibs: the work is easier when you enjoy it. Trade some entertainment time for posting/networking if this is your lane.
- Chill and R2: after wins/losses (airdrops/TGEs), move on fast. Don’t spiral into bitterness or public meltdowns—preserve your reputation. Be a “Karen” about claims and fairness if needed, but keep control.
- Money mindset (R2): early big wins (e.g., 19-year-olds landing $10k airdrops) can distort expectations. Learn to keep money, not just make it. Use some profits to improve your real life (Dibs).
InfoFi/TGE/airdrop landscape update (R2’s rundown)
Note: these are speakers’ live updates/observations; verify details with official channels.
- Turtle
- Snapshot taken for existing leaderboard (0.1% supply). Announced a new Liquidity Leaderboard mixing on-chain plus yapping multiplier.
- A second weekly snapshot (0.2% supply) going forward. TGE likely in Q4; details TBA.
- Portal to Bitcoin (Portal2BTC)
- Yapper claim live; initial 33% claim with additional tranches (another 33% dates discussed, including around the 20th of the month). Price saw dump/recovery dynamics; pattern noted around Binance Alpha launches.
- Insomnia, Union
- Insomnia showed recovery; Union less clear. Some public reactions to Union were extreme—reminder to keep perspective and not harass teams.
- Wallchain/Limitless
- Activity ongoing. If you yapped, link accounts for Limitless; “now is the time to into wallets; rewards are coming.”
- Cam/Count Network
- Announced yappers + Kaito ecosystem airdrop. Process was “tricky.” 80% vesting over 4 months (monthly), but allocations to top-50 yappers were significant relative to other TGEs.
- Polygon
- Monthly $30k to top-50 yappers (first top-15 announced). Ongoing campaign likely ~3 months and possibly extendable.
- OG Lab
- Campaign ending; TGE “very soon” (context: Minecraft traction earlier). Watch for distribution details in 1–2 weeks.
- Morph
- ~$500k campaign on Banter; first of multiple snapshots slated for the 6th. Strong expectations for early snapshot participants.
- Open Ledger
- TGE slated for the 8th; initially mentioned as “Binance Alpha” and later an additional major exchange. Pre-market pricing was soft; listing expansion could change dynamics.
- Two campaigns: a “Cookie/Kuki” campaign with two months complete (rewards expected at TGE) and a third month ending ~17th; est. ~$350k worth of tokens. Separate Kaito campaign ends Oct 1 (2M tokens, ~0.2% supply).
- Kaito ecosystem
- Mixed community feelings about reward sizes and vesting. Chill noted Kaito reserves (~100M tokens not yet distributed; ~65M unclaimed) and will keep pushing for more community allocation.
- Monad/Linea
- Monad: caution on testnet farming expectations; inevitable disappointment for some after long test periods.
- Linea: two years of on-chain efforts (NFTs, quests, “Ignition” liquidity program). TGE expected imminently (early next week). Projects need both social and on-chain metrics for listings/credibility.
Prediction markets are heating up
- Macro thesis (Chill): prediction markets (Polymarket et al.) show real-world informational value (e.g., US elections often outperformed traditional polls). Expect more liquidity, variety, and mainstream touchpoints.
- Content angle
- Easy education and engagement: screen markets, annotate odds and time decay, and trace catalysts.
- Niche edge: doctors on medical markets, political junkies on elections, Elon watchers on Elon bets, etc.
- Creators like MrBeast and public figures have begun referencing markets; expect more crossover.
- Projects/Segments
- AERA will join next week’s space. Another prediction market project (Xi) is also slated. Myriad and others mentioned in the ecosystem.
Q&A highlights and coaching moments
- “How do I grow if no one sees my posts?”
- Do both: content and networking. X’s algorithm needs engagement to propagate posts; replies and relationships seed that engine (Dibs).
- Be novel. Don’t recycle takes. Offer contrarian or additive angles. Bring your voice (Andrew).
- Avoid looking like a project-only broadcaster. Blend project remarks inside your broader niche expertise (R2, Auto).
- Lists and reply volume: don’t over-engineer
- Build larger, relevant lists so your feed naturally surfaces posts you can reply to meaningfully.
- Don’t force quotas per account; reply where you can add something. Mechanical distribution reads as forced (Chill).
- Pinned posts and Highlights
- Pin your best evergreen content (e.g., Bandit’s guide) so new visitors immediately see value. Highlights are underrated for first impressions (Chill).
- “Glazing” vs debate
- Excessive flattery has a ceiling. Friendly disagreement + reasoning is more memorable and earns respect (Chill, R2).
- Using prediction markets for content (Benjamin’s mini-plan)
- Daily market screenshots + commentary for a week to test engagement and growth; tag relevant people thoughtfully. It’s a content goldmine if done right.
The line between fun and finance
- Expectation setting
- TGEs vary; some will underwhelm. Farm, claim, and move on. Don’t let a single result define your approach (Chill).
- Emotional hygiene
- Avoid public rage and personal attacks (seen around Union/Cam incidents). It damages your brand more than it helps.
- Profit real-ization
- Take some profits into real life to anchor wins and avoid “paper-only” psychology (Dibs).
Next week’s changes to the Yap Line
- New time: shifting to a later slot (targeting roughly 3:30 PM CET; hosts will confirm exact time) to better include US/LATAM/Asia while retaining Europe/MENA/Asia audiences.
- New structure: more pre-announced topics (24 hours ahead), more guests, and a recurring “How to make money” segment led by Dibs (on-chain flavor, current trends/risks/educational insights; with disclaimers, not financial advice).
- Guests/Topics: AERA (InfoFi project) and Xi (prediction markets) are planned; more on creator/celebrity coins, on-chain flows, and the mechanics/red flags behind token launches.
Notable quotes and distilled advice
- “Fun comes first; money comes later.” If you enjoy the process, consistency will come naturally (Dibs).
- “Better equals novelty.” Don’t recycle takes; say something new or say it newly (Andrew).
- “Ship post, don’t step on toes.” Short-term rage-bait erodes long-term social capital (Bandit).
- “Be a Karen about TGEs, but move on quickly.” Advocate without poisoning your timeline (Chill).
- “Learn to keep money, not just make it.” Protect family, avoid loans to farm, and respect variance (R2).
Actionable checklist
- Define your lane: value vertical, entertainment, or hybrid. Match tactics to it.
- Build lists by niche and people. Reply where you can be authentic, contrarian, or additive.
- Pin your best evergreen resource and curate Highlights.
- Avoid forced glazing. Debate respectfully with reasons.
- Use prediction markets as a content engine: screenshots, odds changes, catalysts, time decay.
- Track TGEs/snapshots from R2’s list; verify claim processes, vesting, timelines on official channels.
- Set risk guardrails: no loans to farm; don’t hinge family finances on airdrop outcomes.
- Convert some wins to real-life utility.
Closing
The space balanced a necessary reckoning with misinformation/defamation and a practical masterclass on building durable social capital in InfoFi. The through-line: sustainable growth favors authenticity, novelty, ethical boundaries, and steady networking. On the opportunity front, TGEs/snapshots remain active (with mixed outcomes and real vesting nuances), while prediction markets are emerging as both a tradable and content-rich narrative. Next week’s revamped schedule promises more structure, on-chain education with Dibs, and project deep-dives—arriving exactly as September’s campaign calendar heats up.