Claudz

Claudz

@0xClaudz

skillmaxxing - data driven content

Creator
1.3K
Followers
6.4%
Eng. Rate
A+
Audience
1.2K
Real Reach
Content Performance · 144 posts
713
Avg Views / Post
66
Avg Likes / Post
107
Avg Engagement
102.6K
Total Impressions
Audience Quality
A+
Exceptional audience
ER above 0.33% — top-tier engagement, highly active audience
Real Reach1.2K of 1.3K
95% bot-free followers
Engagement Trend
6.3%
W18
12.5%
W19
5.6%
W20
6.4%
W21
6.5%
W22
7.2%
W23
6.0%
W24
5.4%
W25
← Older196 tweets · 8 weeksRecent →
Content Mix
Original tweets58%
Replies16%
Retweets27%
27.3
tweets/week
avg posting frequency
Best Times to Post
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Brand Portfolio
Brand Partner
Brand Partner
May 2026
#ad

i said i'd spend more time inside Freeport before writing again, so i did. i explored markets and read through the smart analyst breakdowns properly, and what surprised me most wasn't the trading. the trading is already solid — spot, perps, pre-ipo, private company markets.....that part you probably already know. but what caught me off guard was the points system. (i didn't expect to write this lol) normally, when a platform says "points" i check out immediately and most reward systems feel completely detached from the actual product. you click things, collect numbers, then you realize none of it means anything tangible. freeport feels different. the rewards are tied to things you'd already be doing — trading, holding, referrals, check-ins, streaks, nothing feels manufactured. but the streak mechanic is a concept that really got me. the longer you stay consistently active, the higher your multiplier climbs. so two people doing the exact same action can earn completely different rewards depending on how long they've been showing up. freeport lets you redeem for fee credits, merch, premium rewards. you have a chance to win $ rewards every 24 hours when you spin chests. the roadmap also has more perks coming. roadmaps change, i know, but it shifts how the whole thing feels the points stop looking like engagement bait and start feeling like participation credits inside something that's still being built. i think that's actually the bigger story here most people frame freeport around access - private markets, pre-ipo deals, narratives retail couldn't touch before, and that's real. but after spending more time inside the app, i have seen that they're also building an incentive layer that rewards consistency. there's more happening beneath the headline feature than most people are talking about yet, and honestly, the timing matters here. the people getting active now are building streak multipliers and point reserves that late joiners won't be able to catch up to easily. if you want to start with an advantage, my referral code gets you $10 in points the moment you sign up. first 75 people only: FREE-CTX2DS see you on the side that prints.

45 likes3 RTs879 views
STON.fi
STON.fi
May 2026
#ad

if you’ve ever tried to bridge tokens across chains and had to beg the gc for gas fees, you know the pain. you have the asset, you want to move it, but you’re stuck because you’re missing a few dollars — sometimes cents — worth of the native coin. that’s the problem @ston_fi’s omniston is directly targeting, and their latest update to the cross-chain execution sandbox is the most concrete move yet toward solving it. small announcement, large downstream implications. you sign a message in your wallet. a resolver picks up the order, submits it on-chain, and covers the gas themselves. smart contracts verify the signed instructions and execute the swap. you never touch gas, the resolver handles it. the contracts enforce it. this shifts gas responsibility from the end user to a network of resolvers who are economically incentivized to execute orders. you express intent, resolvers handle execution. it’s a cleaner separation of concerns. gasless flows point to a deeper architectural shift in what omniston is becoming. stonfi has been clear about the direction: omniston is evolving from a swap aggregator into a full cross-chain execution layer. gasless settlement is part of that infrastructure — the system can handle more complex, multi-step flows without requiring users to pre-fund wallets across multiple chains just to participate. the onboarding angle is significant too. one of the hardest parts of cross-chain defi is the bootstrapping problem. new users need native tokens before they can do anything, which means they need to already be in the ecosystem to enter it. gasless flows cut that loop. it’s early, but the direction is clear. the gasless flow is currently live in sandbox mode on evm source chains — ton-side support still requires gas for now. but sandbox means real conditions, real testing, and ton-side gasless is the logical next step. the settlement model being built now is the foundation for it. the projects that get the infrastructure right while it’s still hard will be the ones users trust when the volume actually arrives. omniston is doing that work deliberately, piece by piece, and the picture is getting clearer.

51 likes1 RTs469 views
Freeport Markets
Freeport Markets
May 2026
#ad

i think one of the most interesting things happening these days is that markets are becoming more internet-native. for years, access itself was the edge. if you could somehow get into private markets, early deals, or insider circles, you already had an advantage most people never would but now? information moves so fast that access alone almost feels incomplete every day online, people discuss billion-dollar private companies in real time. everyone has opinions on them. people debate product launches, funding rounds, AI breakthroughs, government contracts, partnerships, market narratives, and sometimes you can even spot major shifts early just by paying attention online. but for most normal people, that’s where participation ends you observe, form a view, then move on because there’s no actual way to express that view. that disconnect has existed for a long time and honestly, i think most people just accepted it as normal. that is why @freeportmarkets stood out to me within a few hours of using it. the easiest way to explain freeport is this: it lets you get price exposure to markets that were traditionally inaccessible from a normal mobile app. private companies are the clearest example. you can get exposure to names like openai, spacex, anthropic and others directly from your phone. and just to be clear because this part matters: you are not buying shares in those companies and you do not own equity in them. you’re getting 'exposure' to price movements and expressing a market view. that distinction is important. tbh, after using the app for a while, i realized the exposure part is only half the story. the thing i found more interesting is the intelligence layer around it. the biggest problem with most market apps today is an 'understanding problem' and most platforms either overwhelm you with charts, numbers and noise or oversimplify everything into hype and blind conviction. there’s rarely a middle ground. freeport feels different because the product is designed more around context than urgency. the app pulls in a lot of market-moving signals finance twitter and broader internet conversations. then smart analyst breaks everything down in plain language: → what happened → why the market cares → what other narratives connect to it →and what could make the idea wrong that last part is important to me. because online, people love talking about why something will go up but very few people explain what would invalidate the thesis. freeport doesn’t feel like an app screaming “buy now”, it feels more like sitting beside an analyst while the internet reacts in real time. you still make your own decisions the AI is not placing trades for you, it’s not copy trading, and it’s not pretending to predict the future the flow is more like: you see a signal → study the context → form conviction → then you decide whether you want exposure. that experience genuinely feels different from most trading products i’ve used. and i think that’s why this category feels important because maybe the future of markets is not just broader access, maybe it’s broader access with understanding attached to it. that combination is still very new which is probably why it feels early i’ve been spending time on freeport markets for a while now and i can genuinely see why people are paying attention to it early the app is already live, onboarding is smooth, and you can deposit with crypto or fiat directly from your phone definitely one of the more interesting products i’ve explored recently. might start sharing some of the setups and market narratives i’m watching on there soon.

71 likes4 RTs2.2K views
Top Posts
Claudz
Claudz
@0xClaudz·May 16

proof that i am chronically online? i’ve hit the ‘post’ button 20,000 times. you? https://x.com/0xClaudz/status/2055716628801761785/photo/1

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Claudz
Claudz
@0xClaudz·26d

in 2010, kevin systrom had a decision to make. he had built burbn - a location check-in app. feature heavy, decent traction, a clear competitor in foursquare. but he noticed something: the only part of burbn people actually used was the photo sharing. so he made a choice that most founders never make. he killed everything else. stripped the product down to a single function. rebuilt it from scratch in eight weeks. and he built it for one device only...no desktop, no browser, no web version, no uploading from your computer. if you weren't holding a phone, you weren't the user. flickr had been doing photo sharing since 2004. polished product. big team. desktop-first. they assumed you were sitting at a desk. systrom assumed you were standing somewhere interesting with your phone. october 6, 2010. instagram went live on the app store. 25,000 users on day one and one million users in under three months. acquired by facebook for $1 billion eighteen months later. instagram didn't beat flickr by building a better product for the same user. it chose a different user entirely. the internet had gone mobile. instagram was the first platform built on that assumption from day one. crypto got that memo fourteen years late. here's the full story. 🧵

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Claudz
Claudz
@0xClaudz·May 8

guys my first bounty podium finish. this feels so good. 😭 only up from here. 🫂 thank you for the support too. 🥹🫶 btw, study ileri. https://x.com/0xClaudz/status/2052719892340564013/photo/1

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Claudz
Claudz
@0xClaudz·15d

http://x.com/i/article/2062511831621459968

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Claudz
Claudz
@0xClaudz·26d

i think one of the most interesting things happening these days is that markets are becoming more internet-native. for years, access itself was the edge. if you could somehow get into private markets, early deals, or insider circles, you already had an advantage most people never would but now? information moves so fast that access alone almost feels incomplete every day online, people discuss billion-dollar private companies in real time. everyone has opinions on them. people debate product launches, funding rounds, AI breakthroughs, government contracts, partnerships, market narratives, and sometimes you can even spot major shifts early just by paying attention online. but for most normal people, that’s where participation ends you observe, form a view, then move on because there’s no actual way to express that view. that disconnect has existed for a long time and honestly, i think most people just accepted it as normal. that is why @freeportmarkets stood out to me within a few hours of using it. the easiest way to explain freeport is this: it lets you get price exposure to markets that were traditionally inaccessible from a normal mobile app. private companies are the clearest example. you can get exposure to names like openai, spacex, anthropic and others directly from your phone. and just to be clear because this part matters: you are not buying shares in those companies and you do not own equity in them. you’re getting 'exposure' to price movements and expressing a market view. that distinction is important. tbh, after using the app for a while, i realized the exposure part is only half the story. the thing i found more interesting is the intelligence layer around it. the biggest problem with most market apps today is an 'understanding problem' and most platforms either overwhelm you with charts, numbers and noise or oversimplify everything into hype and blind conviction. there’s rarely a middle ground. freeport feels different because the product is designed more around context than urgency. the app pulls in a lot of market-moving signals finance twitter and broader internet conversations. then smart analyst breaks everything down in plain language: → what happened → why the market cares → what other narratives connect to it →and what could make the idea wrong that last part is important to me. because online, people love talking about why something will go up but very few people explain what would invalidate the thesis. freeport doesn’t feel like an app screaming “buy now”, it feels more like sitting beside an analyst while the internet reacts in real time. you still make your own decisions the AI is not placing trades for you, it’s not copy trading, and it’s not pretending to predict the future the flow is more like: you see a signal → study the context → form conviction → then you decide whether you want exposure. that experience genuinely feels different from most trading products i’ve used. and i think that’s why this category feels important because maybe the future of markets is not just broader access, maybe it’s broader access with understanding attached to it. that combination is still very new which is probably why it feels early i’ve been spending time on freeport markets for a while now and i can genuinely see why people are paying attention to it early the app is already live, onboarding is smooth, and you can deposit with crypto or fiat directly from your phone definitely one of the more interesting products i’ve explored recently. might start sharing some of the setups and market narratives i’m watching on there soon.

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Claudz
Claudz
@0xClaudz·19d

i’ve not been sleeping well lately. my back aches. https://x.com/0xClaudz/status/2061390875062657482/photo/1

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Claudz
Claudz
@0xClaudz·22d

rectifying my X payment issue atm. bro, people guide. https://x.com/0xClaudz/status/2060308228852822389/photo/1

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Claudz
Claudz
@0xClaudz·May 14

i’m the best smelling man. 🧏🙂‍↕️ https://x.com/0xClaudz/status/2054918411222651281/photo/1

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Claudz
Claudz
@0xClaudz·19d

June cooking already. winners win. 🧏 let’s do more. https://x.com/0xClaudz/status/2061440950786830490/photo/1

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Claudz
Claudz
@0xClaudz·30d

pizza spent 600 years being paid for with the smallest coins in existence. on may 22nd 2010, a man paid 10,000 bitcoin for two. let me say that again slowly. ten. thousand. bitcoin. that was the most expensive purchase in human history. he just didn't know it yet. https://x.com/0xClaudz/status/2057601236908585173/photo/1

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