2026-04-22 05:21:08
Real-world asset tokenization has been a promise repeated at every blockchain conference for the better part of a decade. Most of those promises stayed on slides. In January 2026, GCL New Energy, a publicly listed energy giant, finalized a strategic investment in Pharos, a high-performance parallel Layer 1 blockchain built by former Ant Group leadership, at a valuation of nearly $1 billion.
\ The deal did not follow the usual Web3 fundraising script. It went through regulatory disclosure procedures, the same standards that govern mainstream institutional capital. That process, and what it signals for where blockchain infrastructure is actually heading, is what we are here to discuss.
\ Joining us today are Wish Wu, Co-Founder and CEO of Pharos, and Jason Huang, Executive Director and President of GCL New Energy.
\ Ishan Pandey: Hi Wish, welcome to HackerNoon's "Behind the Startup" series. Pharos was founded in 2024 by a team that came out of Ant Group, one of the largest fintech operations ever built. What did working inside that system teach you about what blockchain infrastructure actually needs to do, and what made you decide the existing Layer 1 options were not sufficient?
\ Wish Wu: Working inside Ant Group fundamentally reshaped how I think about financial infrastructure. When we operate systems that process massive volumes of real transactions, payments, credit, settlement etc., and you realize very quickly that finance is not just about moving value, it's actually about coordinating state across multiple parties in real time, under strict performance and compliance constraints. What I've learned is that building an infrastructure, it must be deterministic, scalable, and deeply integrated with real-world systems.
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What we saw in existing Layer 1s was a mismatch between design philosophy and real-world requirements. Most were optimized either for decentralization experiments or retail-driven DeFi activity, but not for institutional-grade workloads.
\ Throughput bottlenecks, unpredictable latency, and lack of native compliance primitives made them difficult to integrate into systems that require reliability at scale. Many institutions also have extreme, scenario-specific requirements around privacy, speed, environmental efficiency, and operational customization. This insight directly informed the development of Pharos' Specialized Parallel Network (SPN), which allows institutions to run tailored parallel networks that meet these stringent demands while remaining fully interoperable with the broader Pharos ecosystem.
\ Ishan Pandey: Pharos claims 30,000 TPS with sub-second finality on testnet, and the architecture uses deep parallel execution with a dual VM supporting both EVM and WASM. For a traditional finance institution that has spent decades on systems like SWIFT or Fedwire, why does that throughput number matter, and where does the current generation of Layer 1 blockchains actually break down when institutions try to run real financial workloads on them?
\ Wish Wu: Throughput is often misunderstood as a vanity metric, but for institutions, it means capacity, predictability, and cost efficiency. Systems like SWIFT or Fedwire are not just messaging layers. They are built to handle high-value, time-sensitive transactions with strict guarantees. If a blockchain cannot match or exceed that level of performance, it simply cannot be considered a viable alternative.
\ Where current Layer 1s break down is in contention and sequential execution. Financial systems are inherently parallel, like thousands of independent transactions, portfolios, and strategies operating simultaneously. If your execution model forces those into a linear pipeline, you create bottlenecks and latency spikes. Pharos approaches this differently with deep parallel execution and a dual VM architecture, allowing heterogeneous workloads, whether EVM-based assets or WASM-based applications, to run concurrently. This is what enables not just higher TPS, but consistent low-latency finality under real load, which is what institutions actually care about.
\ Ishan Pandey: The RWA tokenization space has been declared the next trillion-dollar market for several consecutive years. The gap between the promise and actual on-chain liquidity remains wide. In your view, what has concretely held institutional asset tokenization back, and is it a technology problem, a legal problem, or something else?
\ Wish Wu: The gap in RWA tokenization has been about execution across many layers such as legal enforceability, data reliability, and market usability. On the legal side, institutions need clarity on ownership rights, jurisdiction, and dispute resolution. On the data side, tokenizing an asset doesn't solve the problem of whether the underlying data is accurate or auditable. And on the market side, even when assets are tokenized, they often remain illiquid because they are not integrated into active financial primitives.
\ So it's not purely a technology problem or a legal problem. It's always a systems integration problem. What's been missing is infrastructure that can bridge these layers seamlessly until tokenized assets can be trusted, verified, and actively utilized.
\ Ishan Pandey: Pharos has built ZK-KYC and AML compliance modules natively into the protocol layer. Most blockchains treat compliance as an application-layer concern, something developers bolt on top. Why did you make that architectural decision, and what tradeoffs does it create in terms of openness and composability with the rest of DeFi?
\ Wish Wu: We made the decision to build ZK-KYC and AML at the protocol layer because compliance, in an institutional context, should be a foundational feature. Treating it as an application-layer add-on creates fragmentation, inconsistent standards, and ultimately limits interoperability.
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By embedding compliance primitives natively, we enable a model where identity, permissioning, and privacy can coexist. Zero-knowledge proofs allow participants to verify attributes, such as accreditation or jurisdiction, without exposing underlying data.
\ This creates a more scalable approach to compliance that doesn't sacrifice user privacy. The tradeoff is that you introduce a more structured environment compared to fully permissionless systems.
\ Ishan Pandey: Turning to GCL New Energy, your company leads China's power-compute integration strategy and has already run pilot programs for energy revenue tokenization and cross-border settlement. What specific problem in your business were you trying to solve when you first looked at Pharos, and what did you find that existing financial infrastructure could not give you?
\ Jason Huang: From our perspective, as an energy operator, especially in new energy and distributed systems, we deal with fragmented assets, long settlement cycles, and increasingly complex cross-border value flows. Whether it's power generation revenue, carbon assets, or energy trading, the underlying issue is that value creation and value realization are often disconnected in time and across systems.
\ We had already explored internal and pilot solutions around revenue tokenization and cross-border settlement, but existing financial infrastructure was not designed for real-time, granular, and programmable asset flows. It works well for aggregated, periodic settlement, but not for scenarios where assets need to be fractionalized, dynamically priced, and continuously settled.
\ What we found with Pharos was it could support parallel execution and customized environments, which is important for us.
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Energy systems have very specific requirements around data integrity, latency, and operational isolation, and those are difficult to achieve on general-purpose networks.
\ The ability to align infrastructure more closely with real business workflows was a key factor in our decision.
\ Ishan Pandey: The investment in Pharos went through supplemental disclosure procedures, which is unusual for a Web3 deal. From GCL's side, what did that regulatory process reveal about the gap between how blockchain projects present their value and what public market disclosure standards actually require you to prove?
\ Jason Huang: The disclosure process was a useful study case because it applies a different, more rigorous standard than typical Web3 investments. Public markets require clear assumptions, risks, and verifiable pathways to value. Only vision and roadmap are not enough.
\ We can tell there's a gap between blockchain narratives and what institutional capital needs: proof of technical feasibility, integration capability, and real-world relevance.
\ For us, the process forced a focus on measurable impact like improvements in efficiency, reduced settlement friction, and practical asset-management use cases, and the process clarified what large-scale blockchain adoption in traditional industries actually looks like.
\ Ishan Pandey: The collaboration between Pharos and GCL New Energy covers new-energy asset tokenization, distributed energy trading, and carbon footprint tracking. Carbon markets have a credibility problem globally, with double-counting and verification failures well documented. How does putting carbon tracking on-chain solve that specific problem, and where does the trust in the underlying data actually come from?
\ Wish Wu: Carbon markets are a good example of where tokenization alone is insufficient. The core issue is not the ledger but the data integrity and verification. Double-counting and inconsistent reporting happen because there is no unified, transparent system of record. By putting carbon tracking on-chain, we can address part of the problem through creating an immutable audit trail, but the more important layer is how data enters the system. This is where collaboration with an operator like GCL becomes critical. As a real asset owner and energy producer, they generate primary data at the source. When that data is combined with verifiable reporting standards and anchored on-chain, you create a system where every unit of carbon can be traced, verified, and audited in real time.
\ Ishan Pandey: A nearly $1 billion valuation from a listed energy company is a very different signal than a round led by crypto-native VCs. Does that change your hiring strategy, your go-to-market, or the types of builders you want on Pharos, and do you think it changes how other traditional companies look at blockchain infrastructure investments?
\ Wish Wu: This investment reflects how institutions actually evaluate infrastructure. When public market capital operates under disclosure standards that require verifiable performance, clear use cases, and measurable impact, it will force a level of discipline, which is often missing in purely narrative-driven markets.
\ For Pharos, it does influence how we think about hiring and go-to-market. We are increasingly focused on building at the intersection of traditional finance and regulatory systems. That means bringing in people who understand not just Web3, but also how real-world markets operate.
\ Gradually, we believe it will impact how traditional companies see blockchain, they will begin to evaluate it as core infrastructure, something that can improve efficiency, transparency, and coordination across their existing operations.
\ Ishan Pandey: Final question for both of you. The criticism of institutional blockchain adoption is that it recreates the same gatekeeping structures as traditional finance, just with a different database underneath. How do you answer that, and what does success look like for this partnership in five years that would prove the critic wrong?
\ Wish Wu: If blockchain is used simply to replicate existing models, then the criticism holds. But if it is used to standardize access, improve transparency, and enable interoperability, then it can fundamentally expand participation. From my perspective, success over the next five years is not defined by how many assets are tokenized, but by how those assets behave. If tokenized RWAs can be freely integrated into financial primitives, accessed across jurisdictions with programmable compliance, and transacted in real time, then we've moved beyond digitization into true transformation.
\ Jason Huang: From our perspective, sectors like energy, compliance, safety, and asset verification are real constraints. But that doesn't mean the system has to remain as complex or fragmented as it is today. What we see is that blockchain, when applied properly, can shift things from institution-driven processes to shared infrastructure. Instead of multiple parties reconciling data and settling transactions separately, you have a common layer where information is consistent and value can move more directly. Over time, that naturally lowers barriers.
\ Looking ahead five years, we would expect to see more real usage, like energy-related assets being issued, traded, and settled in a more continuous and transparent way. Settlement cycles should be shorter, data more reliable, and participation broader across different types of stakeholders. If we can show that this infrastructure actually improves efficiency, strengthens trust in the data, and enables new ways for capital and assets to interact, then it's clear that this is a better system.
\ Don’t forget to like and share the story!
2026-04-22 03:05:33
:::info The Centre’s five research verticals, Grand Challenges mechanism, and industry partnership model represent a structured attempt to close the gap between India’s geological endowment and its technological capacity.
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\ India’s mining sector has long been described as data-rich but information-poor. These are the structural constraints that Vikram Sodhi, who controls Latin American gold producer Mineros SA through Sun Valley Investments, set out to address when he launched the Vikram Sodhi Centre of Excellence for AI-Enabled Geological and Mining Systems at IIT Kharagpur with a founding commitment of INR 15 crore over five years.
Vikram Sodhi, a Yale University graduate and Sterling Fellow, serves on the Yale President’s Council on International Activities and is the founder of the Sodhi Foundation. In 2024, he endowed Yale School of Medicine’s first professorship dedicated to psychedelic medicine research.
AI adoption in Indian mining remains fragmented and vendor-driven, with tools deployed in isolation rather than integrated into coherent operational systems. The vast data generated by mining operations — geological, operational, and environmental — is largely under-utilised. The Centre is designed to address both constraints, with an emphasis on producing deployable systems rather than publications alone.
The Centre’s programme spans the full mining value chain through five integrated verticals: Exploration (AI-driven mineral target identification), Mine Planning (optimisation of extraction sequencing and resource allocation), Processing (intelligent ore beneficiation), Predictive Maintenance (sensor-driven equipment failure anticipation), and ESG Analytics (real-time environmental and governance monitoring). These are designed as components of a single intelligence system — the output of one vertical feeds into the next.
The Centre’s most distinctive mechanism is its Industry-Linked Grand Challenges programme. Each year, mining companies provide real operational and geological data, which forms the basis for competitive research in which teams develop deployable AI models for industry-defined problems. The mandatory use of real data is the structural safeguard against a familiar failure mode: technically sophisticated work that never reaches an operations floor. For Indian mining contexts specifically, this means research is grounded in the geological complexity, regulatory environment, and operational conditions that distinguish Indian mines from the international benchmarks on which most existing AI tools have been trained.
The establishment of the Vikram Sodhi Centre of Excellence marks a significant strengthening of IIT Kharagpur’s interdisciplinary research ecosystem. In the Institute’s Platinum Jubilee year, this initiative reflects IIT Kharagpur’s continued leadership in advancing collaborative, application-driven research. By integrating geological sciences, mining engineering, and artificial intelligence, the Centre is well-positioned to address complex national challenges through innovation and cross-disciplinary engagement.
— [Prof. Suman Chakraborty, Director, IIT Kharagpur]
The Centre’s five-year roadmap targets deployable AI systems piloted in operating mines, applied research publications, and technology spin-outs or formal industry adoptions. These are ambitious targets for a new research unit. India’s track record with industry-endowed centres at IITs is mixed — some, like the Bosch Centre at IIT Madras, have built genuine research capability; others have struggled to sustain momentum beyond the founding period. The Centre’s architects appear aware of this risk: the roadmap aims to build sufficient non-endowment revenue by Year 5 to reduce dependence on the founding commitment, though the pace of that transition will depend on the maturity of industry relationships and the broader funding environment.
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:::tip This story was distributed as a release by Sanya Kapoor under HackerNoon’s Business Blogging Program.
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2026-04-22 03:00:42
The pace isn't going to slow down. But that doesn't mean you have to lose yourself trying to match it.
There's a version of being in tech right now that looks like this:
You wake up, open LinkedIn, and there are three posts about a model you've never heard of. You open your newsletters; two of them are about the same model, with opposite takes. By the time you've finished your coffee, you're already behind.
\ So, you keep scrolling. You save articles you won't read. You nod along in meetings. You repost things that sound smart. You call it staying current.
\ I did this for about a year. And I was, technically, always "on." Always consuming. Always across the discourse.
\ But when someone actually asked me what I thought, not what I'd read, I struggled. I could recognize ideas. I could summarize the takes. What I couldn't do was explain where I stood, in my own words, with any real conviction.
\ That's when I realized I had a problem. And it wasn't that I wasn't keeping up.
\ It was that I'd confused consumption for thinking.
Here's the thing about how we "stay informed" in AI right now: it's not really an information problem. It's a dopamine problem.
\ New model announcement. Click. New framework. Click. Hot take about whether AI will take your job. Click. Counter-hot-take. Click.
\ Our brains are wired to reward novelty. Every new thing gives you a little hit. And so you develop a very efficient system for processing surface-level information very quickly and a slowly atrophying ability to sit with anything difficult long enough to actually understand it.
\ Nicholas Carr wrote about this more than a decade ago, before most of us were even thinking about AI: the internet doesn't just change what we think about, it changes how we think. The medium shapes the cognition. And a medium optimized for speed and novelty will, over time, produce thinkers who are fast and shallow; good at scanning, poor at depth.
\ I noticed it in myself gradually. Then all at once.
\ I was technically always learning. But I couldn't build on anything, because I didn't actually own any of it. I was fluent in other people's frameworks. I had no framework of my own.
I'm a woman working in AI. I'm early in my career. And I was, for a significant chunk of time, unknowingly doing something that directly undermined the one thing I actually had to offer: my own perspective.
\ When you're constantly consuming everyone else's ideas, you don't just fail to develop your own; you start to perform theirs. Your writing sounds like the newsletters you've been reading. Your opinions are the ones you absorbed from the most recent thread you engaged with. Your voice becomes an echo of other people's voices.
\ For women in technical fields, especially, this matters. The discourse in AI is heavily male-dominated. The frameworks are mostly male-authored. The default "expert voice" in ML writing is a specific kind of confident, jargon-fluent, citation-heavy prose that is not how most of us naturally think or speak.
\ If you're consuming that non-stop and never stepping back to ask, but what do I actually think — you'll eventually find yourself writing in a voice that isn't yours, about things you don't fully believe, for an audience you're not actually speaking to.
\ That was me.
I didn't do a digital detox. I didn't delete any apps. I made a more uncomfortable change: I started letting myself be bored.
\ Not bored in the scrolling-because-there's-nothing-else-to-do sense. Bored in the sitting-with-a-problem-and-not-immediately-reaching-for-an-answer sense.
\ Pascal wrote that "all of humanity's problems stem from man's inability to sit quietly in a room alone." I used to think that was hyperbole. I don't anymore. The ability to be alone with your thoughts — to let ideas develop without immediately externalising or outsourcing them- is a genuinely rare and increasingly fragile skill.
\ I also started writing. Not to publish. Not to perform. Just to figure out what I actually thought.
\ This is the bit I'd push on if you take nothing else from this piece: there is no faster way to discover whether you understand something than to write about it. Not summarize it, write about it. From your own angle. With your own examples. In your own voice.
\ You cannot bluff yourself on the page. Either you can say what you think in sentences that make sense, or you discover that you actually don't know what you think yet. Both outcomes are useful.
I started writing publicly under my own name, as Thinking in the Tension, about AI, about technology, about what it actually feels like to navigate this space as someone who is both building with it and genuinely uncertain about parts of it.
\ After just a couple of articles, I started gaining recognition for my work.
\ I want to be honest about why I think that happened, because it wasn't technical depth. Other writers on these shared platforms have far more expertise than I do. It was perspective. It was the fact that I was writing from a place that wasn't already crowded; a woman, early in her career, thinking out loud about the human side of AI in a space that is mostly populated by confident experts explaining things definitively.
\ The feminine voice in ML writing is rare. And in a space where so much content sounds the same, competent, comprehensive, and personality-free, something that sounds like a person thinking actually stands out.
\ That's not an accident. It's what happens when you stop performing fluency and start being honest about the actual texture of your thinking.
I work in AI. I use it every day. I'm not making an argument against it.
\ But I do think there's a distinction worth drawing clearly: there's a difference between using AI to extend your thinking and using it to replace your thinking.
\ Using AI to explore an idea faster, check your reasoning, draft, and iterate — that's a tool. Using AI to skip the part where you wrestle with the problem yourself — to go straight from question to answer without the uncomfortable middle bit where understanding actually forms — that's a crutch.
\ The uncomfortable middle bit is not inefficiency. It's the point. It's where you develop the capacity to think about the next hard problem, because you built something in yourself while working through this one.
\ When you outsource that, you don't just get a worse answer. You become a slightly worse thinker. And if you do it consistently, over time, the compounding effect is significant.
\ B.F. Skinner once wrote: "The real problem is not whether machines think, but whether men do." He wrote that in 1969.
I'll keep this practical:
1. Pick one thing to go deep on, instead of staying current on everything. You cannot meaningfully engage with every development in AI. You can meaningfully engage with a few. Decide what actually matters to you, not what's trending, and go deeper there. Depth in one area beats surface-level familiarity with everything.
2. Write before you read. When something is on your mind, a problem you're working through, a question you keep coming back to, try writing about it before you go and see what others have said. Even a few paragraphs. Then go read. The difference in how you engage with other perspectives, when you've already articulated your own, is significant.
3. Let yourself be wrong in public, slowly. Not carelessly. Not performatively. But one of the costs of always consuming and rarely producing is that you never develop a relationship with being wrong. Being wrong, thinking it through, updating, that's the actual practice of thinking. It's also what builds credibility over time, because people can see the thinking, not just the conclusions.
This piece is for anyone who has felt the pressure to constantly keep up in AI and wondered whether there might be another way.
\ The pace is real. The pressure is real. But I'd argue that in a field where everyone is trying to sound like they know everything, the most valuable thing you can do is actually understand something. Fewer things, more deeply, more honestly.
\ The discourse doesn't need more confident voices paraphrasing the same five papers. It needs more people willing to think in public, with the uncertainty intact, with the genuine questions on the table, with a perspective that belongs to them and not to whoever they've been reading this week.
\ That's what I've been trying to do under Thinking in the Tension. Not to have all the answers. Just to stay in the questions long enough for them to actually mean something.
\ AI isn't slowing down. But that doesn't mean you have to lose yourself trying to match it.
\ You can still choose to think: deeply, intentionally, and for yourself.
\
2026-04-22 02:33:09
Your Steam inventory is probably worth more than your last paycheck.
I know how that sounds. But stick with me for a second, because it's actually true for most people who've played Counter-Strike for more than a year or two. And the wild part? Most of those players either let all that value sit there collecting dust, or they blow it out for pennies the moment they need quick cash.
Nobody really talks about this in the CS2 community. So let's.
Here's what I wish someone had told me when I opened my first case years ago. CS2 skins aren't just cosmetic junk. They're one of the most active digital asset markets that exists right now.
We're talking billions of dollars moving around every year. Individual skins that have appreciated 500% over five years. A market where knowing what you actually own and when to move it is basically the whole game.
Most players treat their inventory like a drawer of old Pokémon cards they forgot about. The smart ones treat it like a portfolio. That one shift in how you see your stuff is worth more than any trading tip you'll ever read on Reddit.
Before getting into the tactical stuff, there's three things you kinda have to accept. Most articles skip these because they're uncomfortable.
First Steam is designed to keep your money trapped. The Community Market looks convenient. It's also a financial dead end. Every dollar you earn there is stuck in Valve's ecosystem forever. You can't pay rent with Steam Wallet. Can't buy groceries. You're basically converting valuable items into store credit at a 15% loss. That's not selling. That's trading down.
Second most players sell at the worst possible time. They panic-sell when bills are due. They dump items during market downswings because they got scared. They accept the first offer they see because they have no idea what their stuff is actually worth. Emotion-driven selling is why the same skin can change hands three times before landing with someone who actually profits from it.
Third the platform you pick matters more than the skin you're selling. Two identical skins sold on two different platforms can have a 40% difference in payout. Players who don't compare options are quietly leaving hundreds of dollars on the table every single year without realizing it.
Accept these three things and you're already ahead of maybe 80% of the community.
If you're gonna sell intelligently, you need to know what you're holding. Most players glance at one price on Steam and call it done. That's amateur hour.
Real value comes from five factors stacking together.
Wear condition creates the biggest swings. The same skin in Factory New versus Battle-Scarred can differ by 10x. Always check this first.
Float value is the precision number underneath the wear tier. Collectors pay serious premiums for the lowest floats in Factory New and the highest in Battle-Scarred. Two "Factory New" skins can have a 3x price gap based purely on float. Gets nerdy, but the money is real.
Pattern index is where real money hides. For Case Hardened, Fade, and Marble Fade skins, specific patterns turn ordinary items into six-figure trophies. A "Blue Gem" Case Hardened AK can sell for 50x a regular one with identical wear. Not exaggerating.
Stickers are the wild card. Holo and foil stickers from older Majors can multiply a skin's value several times over. Some stickered AK-47s outsell knives. It's bizarre but it happens.
StatTrak adds a modest premium through the kill counter. Usually smaller than players expect, but still meaningful on popular skins.
Ignore these and you're pricing your inventory with half the info. Every time.
Here's the exact set of questions I run through before selling anything valuable.
Is this skin's supply increasing or decreasing? If Valve just added it to a new case drop, supply is about to flood in and prices will drop. If it's from a discontinued collection, supply is frozen and demand pressure builds over time.
What's happening in the CS2 competitive calendar? Prices move pretty predictably around Majors, tournament seasons, and big game updates. Selling two weeks before a Major is almost always worse than selling during one.
Am I selling because of logic or emotion? If you need cash today, that's a real reason. Fine. If you're selling because you're bored with the game, frustrated with a loss streak, or reacting to a price dip you're about to make a bad trade.
What's my walk-away price? Decide before you open any marketplace what your minimum acceptable price is for each item. Platforms are literally designed to create urgency and nudge you toward accepting less. A pre-set walk-away price is your defense.
Four questions. Takes maybe five minutes per item. Better decisions than 90% of CS2 players.
You've got three real options, and the one you pick decides whether you walk away with cash or regret.
Steam Community Market is safe but limiting. Money locked in Steam forever, 15% fee. Only use this if you genuinely plan to spend that balance on games or other Steam stuff.
Third-party marketplaces are where serious sellers operate. Real-money payouts through PayPal, bank transfer, or crypto, usually processed within minutes. The catch is platform selection matters a lot rates, fees, and trust levels vary wildly between sites. If you want to sell cs2 skins for actual money you can spend in real life, this is the category to focus on. Just compare at least two options before you commit to one.
Direct peer-to-peer trades can get you the best prices but carry the most risk. Scams in this space are sophisticated and common. Unless you're experienced and use verified middlemen, the extra margin almost never justifies what you're risking.
This is the sequence profitable sellers follow, and it just works.
Audit your inventory and check prices across multiple sources. Not just Steam pull data from at least two independent price trackers. Sort your items into three buckets: sell now, hold long-term, trade up. Pick your platform based on which payout method actually works for your life. Test the process with a small item before moving your valuable pieces. Then execute without hesitation once your conditions are met.
Twenty minutes of prep here is worth more than any "trading secret" in some Discord server.
Every time you sell a skin, you're making one of two choices.
You're either treating it like the financial decision it actually is researched, timed, executed with a plan. Or you're treating it as an afterthought, accepting whatever offer shows up first, and quietly losing money you didn't even know you had.
Players who profit from the CS2 economy aren't smarter than you. Aren't luckier either. They just stopped treating their inventory like clutter and started treating it like capital.
Your skins have been quietly earning or losing value the entire time you've owned them. Only question left is whether you take control of that process or keep being the player other traders rely on for their profits.
Your move.
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:::tip This story was distributed as a release by Sanya Kapoor under HackerNoon’s Business Blogging Program.
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2026-04-22 02:11:00
Port Vila, Vanuatu, April 21st, 2026/Chainwire/--Vantage, a multi-asset CFD platform, has introduced an enhanced version of the Vantage App, with upgrades focused on asset visibility, capital movement, and a more integrated all-in-one trading experience.
As multi-asset investing becomes more complex, users expect more from trading platforms than execution alone. Beyond spreads, liquidity, and order speed, they increasingly look for clearer asset visibility, smoother capital movement, and a more connected experience across different financial use cases. This is the backdrop for the rise of all-in-one trading apps.
It is unfolding at a time when the boundary between traditional market access and digital trading infrastructure is becoming increasingly fluid. In the U.S., discussion around tokenized equities, more continuous market access, and modernized trading rails has accelerated, with Nasdaq recently announcing an equity token design initiative. Growing attention to tokenized gold and other digitally accessible commodity-related products also points to changing investor expectations around how capital, market access, and asset visibility connect across trading scenarios.
For Vantage, the relevance of this all-in-one model is not about placing more modules inside one interface. It is about reorganising the platform around the user’s full asset journey. That means moving beyond isolated workflows and toward a more connected, integrated structure built on asset clarity, capital mobility, and financial utility.
In fragmented platform models, users often need to switch across contract accounts, copy trading accounts, funding wallets, and yield modules just to understand where their money sits. An integrated app experience begins with a unified view — one that helps users understand balances, positions, and allocation across different account types from a single starting point.
Traditional platforms may require users to understand internal account structures before they can deposit, transfer, withdraw, subscribe, or redeem. That may make sense from a backend perspective, but it creates unnecessary friction for users. The enhanced Vantage App simplifies the front-end journey, allowing capital movement to feel more direct and intuitive, while underlying processes remain in place.
In disconnected environments, funds may sit idle between product switches, transfers, or trading decisions. In a more integrated platform, users are able to see how capital is allocated, what remains unused, and how quickly funds can be repositioned. This is not just a convenience upgrade — it may improve how users manage available funds over time.
Increasingly, users may expect platforms to connect trading with adjacent functions such as payments, card-linked services, and yield-related features, where available. Product availability varies by market, account status, and regulatory requirements, but the broader direction is evolving: the platform is becoming a more connected financial environment rather than a standalone execution tool.
This may also influence how trust is built. Execution quality and system stability remain essential, but in an all-in-one environment, trust also depends on transparency of assets, clarity of funding paths, and consistency across services. As platforms play a larger role in how users organise and move capital, they also place greater emphasis on how that experience is designed.
For Vantage, this evolution is about building an all-in-one platform experience that supports the full lifecycle of user activity — from overview and funding to trading, yield, and broader financial utility. More broadly, it reflects an industry shift: the key question is no longer only what users can trade, but how well a platform helps them manage their activity.
That is why the all-in-one model is relevant. It signals a move away from fragmented product design and toward a platform structure built around how users manage capital in a multi-asset world.
For Vantage, that all-in-one direction is currently taking shape.
Vantage Markets is a multi-asset CFD broker offering access to trading opportunities across global financial markets. Through its range of trading platforms and tools, Vantage aims to provide users with a more accessible and efficient trading experience, subject to regulatory approval and availability in each jurisdiction.
Risk Warning: CFDs are complex instruments and carry a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. Ensure you understand the risks before trading.
Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice or a recommendation to trade. It is not intended for distribution or use in any jurisdiction where such distribution would be contrary to local laws or regulations.
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Vantage
:::tip This story was published as a press release by Chainwire under HackerNoon’s Business Blogging Program
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Disclaimer:
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Cryptocurrencies are speculative, complex, and involve high risks. This can mean high prices volatility and potential loss of your initial investment. You should consider your financial situation, investment purposes, and consult with a financial advisor before making any investment decisions. The HackerNoon editorial team has only verified the story for grammatical accuracy and does not endorse or guarantee the accuracy, reliability, or completeness of the information stated in this article. #DYOR
2026-04-22 01:58:46
Manila, Philippines, April 21st, 2026/Chainwire/--Coins.ph, the Philippines’ leading crypto-native digital wallet and a pioneer in blockchain-backed financial services, announced the rollout of its game-changing QRPh Stablecoin Payment functionality.
This landmark feature, available starting today, enables the platform’s millions of users to settle transactions using Philippine Pesos (PHP), supported stablecoins namely, USDT and USDC, or a combination of both in a single, unified checkout flow.
QRPh is the Philippines' national QR code standard, developed by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP). It was designed to provide a safe, convenient, and interoperable payment system, allowing customers to pay for goods and services by scanning a single QR code, regardless of whether the merchant and the customer use different banks or e-wallets. QRPh eliminates the need for merchants to display multiple QR codes for different providers, streamlining the digital payment experience across the country.
As the first e-wallet in the Philippines to integrate stablecoin payment capabilities with the national QRPh standard, Coins.ph has effectively bridged the gap between digital asset portfolios and daily commerce. This functionality is immediately compatible with nearly 700,000 QRPh-enabled merchants across the country, ranging from small local enterprises to major retail chains.
The scale of this innovation is underscored by Coins.ph’s dominant market presence. In December 2025 alone, the platform processed nearly ₱30 billion in QRPh transactions, highlighting the massive existing infrastructure now primed for crypto integration.
For the initial rollout, Coins.ph has prioritized the two most liquid and widely held stablecoins globally. While more tokens are slated for integration in the coming months, the first phase supports:
The launch of the QRPh Stablecoin Payment flow addresses a long-standing friction point: the need for manual pre-conversion. With an automated conversion process at the point of sale, Coins.ph provides a frictionless experience that allows users to leverage their diversified holdings without leaving the transaction interface.
"After a long but exciting development process, Coins.ph is proud to finally introduce its QRPh Stablecoin Payment Support, a new experience that allows eligible users to complete a QRPh transaction using PHP, supported stablecoins, or a combination of both within a single checkout flow. We expect this new feature to revolutionize how our users make payments, whether it’s for usual coffee runs or for weekend shopping at large retail chains," said Wei Zhou, CEO of Coins.ph.
"This initiative is part of Coins’ broader effort to make crypto more usable in everyday scenarios and to simplify merchant QR transactions for users who hold funds across different asset types."
A Seamless, Unified Architecture
The QRPh Stablecoin Payment system is engineered for maximum flexibility, supporting three distinct modes:
During the checkout process, the platform generates real-time conversion quotes, ensuring transparency. Once confirmed, the system executes the conversion and the merchant transaction as part of one continuous journey, eliminating the complexity typically associated with blockchain-based commerce.
Appropriate reversal handling is applied if the QRPh payment does not complete successfully. In case of refunds, all QRPh refunds are returned in PHP, regardless of whether the original payment used crypto conversion.
"By transforming crypto from a passive investment into a versatile tool for daily life, we are setting a new standard for national payments. As QRPh adoption in the Philippines surges, Coins.ph remains at the forefront, ensuring every Filipino has the power to choose how they store, grow, and now spend their digital assets," Zhou said.
About Coins.ph
Coins.ph is building the next generation of global money movement. Through a single platform, businesses and consumers can make payments, move money across borders, convert currencies, access digital assets, and tap into a growing suite of financial services — from cards and credit to investments and treasury. By combining stablecoin-powered settlement with local payment rails, Coins makes money move faster, at lower cost, and with 24/7/365 availability.
Global Marketing Director
Amira Alawi
Coins.ph
:::tip This story was published as a press release by Chainwire under HackerNoon’s Business Blogging Program
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Disclaimer:
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Cryptocurrencies are speculative, complex, and involve high risks. This can mean high prices volatility and potential loss of your initial investment. You should consider your financial situation, investment purposes, and consult with a financial advisor before making any investment decisions. The HackerNoon editorial team has only verified the story for grammatical accuracy and does not endorse or guarantee the accuracy, reliability, or completeness of the information stated in this article. #DYOR
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