UnluckyMiner

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Just looked up Clix's earnings breakdown and honestly, the numbers are wild. Dude's only 21 and already sitting on a $27 million net worth in 2026. His yearly earnings are somewhere between $1.1 to $1.5 million—that's insane for someone who literally started with just a gaming PC his dad helped him buy. The money comes from everywhere: tournament wins (he made $112k from the Fortnite World Cup alone), YouTube ads with 3.6M subscribers, Twitch streaming, brand deals, you name it. Over $300k just from Fortnite tournaments so far. Like, I get that he's skilled, but seeing how much Clix earnings s
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just found out how much clix actually makes and bro... the numbers are wild. dude's only 21 and already sitting on like $27 million net worth in 2026. started from a gaming pc his dad helped him buy and now he's one of the richest esports players out there.
so clix (real name cody conrod, from connecticut) basically blew up after hitting the fortnite world cup in 2019. he's been grinding tournaments ever since - pulled in $112k from that world cup alone, then another $80k from fncs finals in 2021. that's just tournament money though.
what's crazy is his youtube side hustle. 3.6 million subscri
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I've been watching the NFT space pretty closely, and something's become pretty clear: the quality of your NFT project often comes down to who you hire to build it. Back when NFTs were just about digital art, picking a development partner felt like a secondary decision. But in 2026, with NFTs woven into gaming, real estate, music, and pretty much every industry you can think of, choosing the right top nft development company has become absolutely critical to whether your idea actually survives.
The thing is, the gap between a successful NFT platform and a failed one rarely comes down to the con
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Just looked at the NFT sales history and honestly, the numbers are wild. We're talking about a market where a single piece of digital art broke the $90 million mark. The most expensive nft ever sold is The Merge by Pak—$91.8 million in December 2021. But here's what's interesting: it wasn't one buyer. Over 28,000 collectors pooled together, each buying units that scaled in size based on their investment. That's not just art, that's a social movement wrapped in blockchain.
Before The Merge, Beeple's Everydays dominated the conversation. $69.3 million at Christie's in March 2021. The guy literal
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You know how the Wolf of Wall Street movie became a cultural phenomenon? Most people don't realize it's based on a real guy—Jordan Belfort—and his actual story is way messier than what DiCaprio portrayed on screen.
Belfort wasn't always a fraudster. Started out selling frozen desserts from coolers at the beach as a kid, made decent money doing it. Then he tried dental school, meat business, both failed. By his mid-twenties he'd already filed for bankruptcy. But instead of giving up, he pivoted to stocks.
Here's where it gets wild. By 1990, just a few years into running his own firm Stratton Oa
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So I've been noticing how streaming has completely flipped the wealth game, and Kai Cenat is honestly one of the best examples of this shift. Guy went from posting comedy skits to becoming one of the most financially successful creators out there.
Let me break down what I'm seeing with Kai Cenat net worth in 2026. The consensus is sitting somewhere between $35 million and $45 million depending on how you measure it - contracts, sponsorships, platform deals, all that stuff. That's a wild jump from where he was just a few years ago.
Here's what's interesting: it's not just one income stream. His
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So everyone's curious about Elon Musk height-wise, right? He's actually 6'2", which is pretty tall compared to most tech founders. But honestly, that's probably the least interesting thing about the guy.
What's actually wild is watching how this one person has managed to build an empire across like five different industries simultaneously. Started from a relatively privileged background in South Africa, moved to Canada as a teenager to dodge military service, and basically never stopped building since.
The PayPal exit in 2002 gave him around $180 million, which most people would retire on. Ins
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So I've been looking at HBAR lately and honestly, the price prediction for 2026 is getting pretty interesting. Right now it's sitting around $0.09, which is down from where it was a couple months back. But here's the thing that keeps catching my attention.
Hedera isn't your typical blockchain project. It runs on something called Hashgraph, which is basically designed to be faster, cheaper, and more secure than most blockchains out there. And the backing is legit - Google, IBM, LG, Boeing, Deutsche Telekom actually run nodes on this thing. That's not common in crypto.
Looking at the history, HB
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Just realized a lot of people are struggling with updating their SASSA details, especially when it comes to changing banking information. The process is actually pretty different depending on which grant you're on, so worth clarifying.
If you're getting a permanent grant like the old age or disability one, you basically have to go in person to your nearest SASSA office. Can't do it online no matter what. You'll need to fill out a Payment Method Change Form, bring your ID and proof of your new bank account (a recent bank statement or letter from the bank works). Important thing though - the acc
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Just caught an interesting setup that Egrag Crypto flagged for XRP holders, and honestly the technical picture here is worth paying attention to.
So here's what's happening. XRP is currently sitting around $1.44, and according to Egrag Crypto's analysis, we're looking at a macro descending broadening wedge that's been building pressure over multiple cycles. The key insight here is that this isn't about short-term noise or daily fluctuations. It's pure structure. The pattern shows widening price movement followed by compression, which typically signals energy building before a directional break
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Just caught something interesting. Looks like the old guard on Wall Street is finally paying attention to prediction markets. Schwab's CEO Rick Wurster basically confirmed they're seriously looking at getting into this space, though they're being pretty selective about it.
Here's the thing though - Wurster made it clear Schwab won't be touching sports betting, politics, or anything that looks like pure gambling. They're positioning this as a wealth-building tool, not a casino. That's actually a smart move given the regulatory heat these platforms have been taking. Kalshi and Polymarket explode
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Been following the gold price action pretty closely this past week and there's some interesting dynamics playing out. The week started around $4,663/oz and we hit highs near $4,858 before pulling back. Most traders seem to think gold prices could keep climbing from here - about half the people I see posting are bullish, though a decent chunk expect we'll just chop around sideways.
The $4,736 level seems to be the battleground everyone's watching. If gold price breaks and holds above that, we could see a real move toward $4,871 and potentially $4,993. But if we drop below $4,614, support shifts
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Been following the Gary Wang sentencing case and it's actually pretty interesting how differently things played out compared to SBF. So Wang, who was FTX's CTO, just got his verdict back in late 2024 after months of waiting. The whole thing is a wild contrast to what happened with the other guys involved.
Here's the thing about Gary Wang - his defense strategy was basically that he was way less involved than people thought. His lawyer kept emphasizing how he cooperated early with the feds, which actually helped nail SBF's coffin shut. While SBF got absolutely destroyed with a 25-year sentence
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Just caught wind of something pretty significant happening in Japan. Their government officially moved crypto-assets under the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act at the legislative level. This is a pretty big deal if you think about it.
So what's changing? Until now, crypto-assets were basically treated as payment methods under the Payment Services Act. But with growing investment demand, they're tightening things up. The regulatory framework is shifting to something much stricter. Registered operators will get a new title - from crypto-asset exchange operators to crypto-asset trading oper
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Interesting movement in the Persian Gulf these hours. Two ADNOC tanker ships - Al Hamra and Mraweh - are crossing Oman's territory and heading toward the Strait of Hormuz from the eastern side. If they manage to pass, it would mark the first LNG operation of this scale during the Middle Eastern energy crisis.
According to circulating maritime monitoring data, the timing is quite interesting. Iran announced the reopening of the strait to commercial traffic just these days, and immediately afterward, these movements appear. Hard to believe it's a coincidence.
What stands out is that so far, duri
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Interesting development from Moscow: the Bank of Russia is about to require citizens to declare all crypto assets they hold abroad. The news broke on April 15th, and the regulatory framework will come into effect in July.
Basically, they are not banning anyone from owning cryptocurrencies in foreign wallets — the point is transparency. Those with crypto funds outside Russian borders will have to report it to the Federal Tax Service. It’s a move aimed at strengthening KYC controls on trading platforms, according to Vladimir Chistyukhin, one of the central bank’s executives.
The logic is clear:
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Just caught the TD Securities take on March nonfarm payroll numbers and honestly, it's pretty underwhelming. They're calling for just 30k new jobs overall - 40k from private sector but minus 10k in government positions. That's basically the Fed's signal that the economy's cooling off, which is exactly what they want to see right now.
What's interesting is how they're framing the unemployment rate. Expecting it to hold at 4.4%, but the risks actually point downward - meaning it could creep up to 4.5%. The February weather and strike disruptions are basically reversing out, so if the nonfarm pay
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Just caught Christine Lagarde's latest remarks at the IMFC session, and honestly, the ECB President is painting a pretty sobering picture of what's ahead for the global economy.
The core issue? We're stuck in this weird limbo where growth drivers and headwinds are basically battling it out. On one hand, the AI boom and fiscal support from major economies are keeping things afloat. But here's where it gets messy—geopolitical tensions and trade frictions are becoming real obstacles, and they're not going away anytime soon.
What caught my attention most was Christine Lagarde's focus on the Middle
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So I've been scrolling through crypto discussions and honestly, 2026 is looking pretty interesting for people trying to figure out which crypto coins actually matter. Everyone's talking about the obvious ones like Bitcoin and Ethereum still being the backbone of everything, but there's a lot more nuance if you dig deeper.
The way I see it, you've got your established players that just keep doing their thing. Bitcoin's still Bitcoin – limited supply, digital gold narrative, all that. Ethereum powers basically all the smart contracts and DeFi stuff that actually works. Then you've got Solana doi
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Just caught an interesting pattern in USD/TRY lately. So after that US-Iran tension spike, the Turkish Lira actually held up pretty well, and now it looks like the carry trade is making a real comeback there. ING's been tracking this, and apparently when things got shaky, traders had basically halved their long positions on the Lira. The CBT's forex reserves took a hit too—dropped from $210B down to around $161B during that period.
But here's what's catching my eye: investors are slowly getting back into Turkish Lira positions again. The geopolitical pressure eased, and that's given the centra
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