
Every hour you wait is a signal you miss.

Stop Guessing, Start Trading: The Token Metrics API Advantage
Big news: We’re cranking up the heat on AI-driven crypto analytics with the launch of the Token Metrics API and our official SDK (Software Development Kit). This isn’t just an upgrade – it's a quantum leap, giving traders, hedge funds, developers, and institutions direct access to cutting-edge market intelligence, trading signals, and predictive analytics.
Crypto markets move fast, and having real-time, AI-powered insights can be the difference between catching the next big trend or getting left behind. Until now, traders and quants have been wrestling with scattered data, delayed reporting, and a lack of truly predictive analytics. Not anymore.
The Token Metrics API delivers 32+ high-performance endpoints packed with powerful AI-driven insights right into your lap, including:
- Trading Signals: AI-driven buy/sell recommendations based on real-time market conditions.
- Investor & Trader Grades: Our proprietary risk-adjusted scoring for assessing crypto assets.
- Price Predictions: Machine learning-powered forecasts for multiple time frames.
- Sentiment Analysis: Aggregated insights from social media, news, and market data.
- Market Indicators: Advanced metrics, including correlation analysis, volatility trends, and macro-level market insights.
Getting started with the Token Metrics API is simple:
- Sign up at www.tokenmetrics.com/api.
- Generate an API key and explore sample requests.
- Choose a tier–start with 50 free API calls/month, or stake TMAI tokens for premium access.
- Optionally–download the SDK, install it for your preferred programming language, and follow the provided setup guide.
At Token Metrics, we believe data should be decentralized, predictive, and actionable.
The Token Metrics API & SDK bring next-gen AI-powered crypto intelligence to anyone looking to trade smarter, build better, and stay ahead of the curve. With our official SDK, developers can plug these insights into their own trading bots, dashboards, and research tools – no need to reinvent the wheel.
Why Manual Crypto Portfolio Management Is Costing You Money (And Time)
You're tracking 50+ tokens across three exchanges, updating your rebalancing spreadsheet every weekend, and second-guessing every exit decision at 2 AM. Sound familiar? Manual crypto portfolio management isn't just exhausting—it's expensive. Between missed rebalances, execution drag, and behavioral mistakes during volatility, DIY portfolio management quietly erodes returns before you see any market gains.
The data tells the story: investors who manually manage diversified crypto portfolios typically underperform comparable automated strategies by 12-18% annually, with 60% of that gap coming from operational inefficiency rather than market timing. If you're spending 10+ hours weekly maintaining positions, those hours have a cost—and it's higher than you think.
The Hidden Costs Destroying Your Returns
Time Drain: The 500-Hour Tax
Managing a diversified crypto portfolio demands constant vigilance. For investors holding 20+ positions, the weekly time investment breaks down to approximately:
- Market monitoring: 5-8 hours tracking prices, news, and on-chain metrics
- Rebalancing calculations: 2-3 hours determining optimal weights and required trades
- Order execution: 3-5 hours placing trades across multiple platforms
- Record keeping: 1-2 hours logging transactions for tax reporting
- Research updates: 3-5 hours staying current on project developments
That's 14-23 hours weekly, or 728-1,196 hours annually. At a conservative $50/hour opportunity cost, you're spending $36,400-$59,800 in time value maintaining your portfolio. Even if you value your time at minimum wage, that's still $10,000+ in annual "sweat equity" that automated solutions eliminate.
Execution Drag: Death by a Thousand Trades
Small trades erode portfolios through accumulated friction. Every manual rebalance across a 50-token portfolio requires dozens of individual transactions, each incurring:
- Trading fees: 0.1-0.5% per trade (average 0.25%)
- Bid-ask spreads: 0.2-0.8% depending on liquidity
- Slippage: 0.3-1.2% on smaller cap tokens
- Gas fees: $2-50 per transaction depending on network congestion
For a $100,000 portfolio rebalanced monthly with 40 trades per rebalance, the costs add up:
- Average cost per trade: ~$100
- Monthly execution drag: $4,000
- Annual execution drag: $48,000 (48% of portfolio value)
The smaller your individual trades, the worse the ratio becomes. A $500 rebalancing trade on a low-liquidity altcoin might pay $25 in fees—a 5% instant loss before any price movement.
Automated indices solve this. TM Global 100, Token Metrics' rules-based index, consolidates 100 individual positions into a single transaction at purchase, with weekly rebalances executed through optimized smart contract batching. Users typically save 3-7% annually in execution costs alone compared to manual approaches.
Behavioral Mistakes: Your Worst Enemy Is in the Mirror
Market psychology research shows that manual portfolio managers tend to make predictable, costly mistakes:
- Panic selling during drawdowns: When Bitcoin drops 25% in a week, can you stick to your exit rules? Many override their plans during high volatility, often selling near local bottoms.
- FOMO buying at peaks: Tokens up 300% in a week attract chase behavior, with managers entering after the movement is mostly over.
- Rebalancing procrastination: Putting off rebalancing leads to drift, holding too much of past winners and missing new opportunities.
Token Metrics' systematic approach removes emotion from the equation. The TM Global 100 Index follows a transparent ruleset: hold the top 100 tokens by market cap during bullish phases, shift to stablecoins during bearish cycles, and rebalance weekly—eliminating emotional override and procrastination.
Missed Rebalances: Drifting Out of Position
Market cap rankings shift constantly. A token ranked #73 on Monday might hit #95 by Friday, or surge to #58. Without systematic rebalancing, your portfolio becomes a collection of recent winners or dumpers.
In Q3 2024, Solana ecosystem tokens surged while Ethereum DeFi tokens consolidated. Manual managers who missed weekly rebalances held too much ETH and insufficient SOL exposure. The result: 15-20% underperformance compared to systematically rebalanced portfolios. Data from Token Metrics shows that weekly rebalancing outperforms monthly or quarterly approaches by 8-12% annually.
Tax Reporting Nightmares
Every trade creates a taxable event. Manual managers executing over 200 trades yearly face:
- Hours spent compiling transaction logs
- Reconciliation across multiple exchanges
- Cost-basis tracking for numerous lots
- High professional accounting fees ($500-2,000+)
Automated solutions like Token Metrics provide transparent transaction logs for each rebalance, simplifying tax reporting and reducing accounting costs.
The Token Metrics Advantage: Research Meets Execution
Token Metrics has established itself as a leading crypto analytics platform, supporting over 50,000 users with AI-powered token ratings, market regime detection, portfolio optimization tools, and trading signals. But analysis alone isn't enough—implementation is crucial.
TM Global 100 Index bridges this gap. It turns research into actionable, tradeable products by automating rebalancing based on Token Metrics' signals and methodology. One click replaces hours of manual work, following a validated systematic approach.
Automation Without Compromise
The best automation is transparent. TM Global 100 offers:
- Rules-Based Discipline: Bull markets—hold top 100 tokens; bear markets—move to stablecoins
- Weekly rebalancing every Monday
- Full methodology disclosure
- One-Click execution via embedded self-custodial wallet
- Real-time market insights and holdings visualization
- Transaction logs with fees and timestamps
This streamlined process allows users to rapidly execute disciplined rebalancing, saving countless hours and increasing operational efficiency while maintaining asset control.
Decision Framework: When to Automate
Automation suits investors who:
- Hold 15+ tokens and find rebalancing burdensome
- Miss optimal rebalancing windows due to time constraints
- Have experienced emotional trading decisions during volatility
- Spend over 5 hours a week on portfolio management
- Want broad exposure without manual tracking
Manual management may be suitable for those with fewer positions, active trading infrastructure, or tactical strategies. For most diversified portfolios, automation enhances efficiency and reduces operational errors.
The Compound Effect of Efficiency
Small inefficiencies compound over time. Over five years, a $50,000 portfolio managed manually with a 12% annual return minus 4-2-1% losses yields roughly a 5% net return, ending at about $63,814. A systematic approach with optimizer integration, zero behavioral errors, and regular rebalancing can attain a 13% net return, reaching approximately $92,246—an increase of over $28,000, not counting time saved.
Conclusion: Time Back, Returns Up
Manual crypto portfolio management made sense when portfolios were small and concentrated. Today’s diversified sets require operational discipline to prevent erosion of returns due to execution drag, missed rebalances, and emotional mistakes. Token Metrics built TM Global 100 to turn research into automated, transparent execution, reclaim your time, and boost portfolio discipline—without sacrificing control.
Moonshots API: Discover Breakout Tokens Before the Crowd
The biggest gains in crypto rarely come from the majors. They come from Moonshots—fast-moving tokens with breakout potential. The Moonshots API surfaces these candidates programmatically so you can rank, alert, and act inside your product. In this guide, you’ll call /v2/moonshots
, display a high-signal list with TM Grade and Bullish tags, and wire it into bots, dashboards, or screeners in minutes. Start by grabbing your key at Get API Key, then Run Hello-TM and Clone a Template to ship fast.
What You’ll Build in 2 Minutes
- A minimal script that fetches Moonshots via
/v2/moonshots
(optionally filter by grade/signal/limit). - A UI pattern to render symbol, TM Grade, signal, reason/tags, and timestamp—plus a link to token details.
- Optional one-liner curl to smoke-test your key.
- Endpoints to add next:
/v2/tm-grade
(one-score ranking),/v2/trading-signals
,/v2/hourly-trading-signals
(timing),/v2/resistance-support
(stops/targets),/v2/quantmetrics
(risk sizing),/v2/price-prediction
(scenario ranges).
Why This Matters
Discovery that converts. Users want more than price tickers—they want a curated, explainable list of high-potential tokens. The Moonshots API encapsulates multiple signals into a short list designed for exploration, alerts, and watchlists you can monetize.
Built for builders. The endpoint returns a consistent schema with grade, signal, and context so you can immediately sort, badge, and trigger workflows. With predictable latency and clear filters, you can scale to dashboards, mobile apps, and headless bots without reinventing the discovery pipeline.
Where to Find The Moonshots API
The cURL request for the Moonshots endpoint is displayed in the top right of the API Reference. Grab it and start tapping into the potential!
- Get API Key — generate a key and start free.
- Run Hello-TM — verify your first successful call.
- Clone a Template — deploy a screener or alerts bot today.
- Compare plans: Scale confidently with API plans.
How It Works (Under the Hood)
The Moonshots endpoint aggregates a set of evidence—often combining TM Grade, signal state, and momentum/volume context—into a shortlist of breakout candidates. Each row includes a symbol, grade, signal, and timestamp, plus optional reason tags for transparency.
For UX, a common pattern is: headline list → token detail where you render TM Grade (quality), Trading Signals (timing), Support/Resistance (risk placement), Quantmetrics (risk-adjusted performance), and Price Prediction scenarios. This enables users to understand why a token was flagged and how to act with risk controls.
Polling vs webhooks. Dashboards typically poll with short-TTL caching. Alerting flows use scheduled jobs or webhooks to smooth traffic and avoid duplicates. Always make notifications idempotent.
Production Checklist
- Respect plan caps; batch and throttle in clients/workers.
- Use exponential backoff with jitter on 429/5xx; capture request IDs.
- De-duplicate alerts and downstream actions.
- Use memory/Redis with short TTLs; pre-warm during peak hours.
- Fetch in pages if supported; parallelize within limits.
- Sort primarily by tm_grade or composite; surface reason tags to build trust.
- Track p95/p99, error rates, and alert delivery success; log variants.
- Store keys securely; rotate regularly.
Use Cases & Patterns
- Bot Builder (Headless): Filter for tokens appearing in Moonshots with tm_grade ≥ X. Confirm entry with /v2/trading-signals; place stops/targets with /v2/resistance-support; size via Quantmetrics.
- Dashboard Builder (Product): Moonshots tab with badges (Bullish, Grade 80+, Momentum). Token detail page with TM Grade, Signals, S/R, and Predictions for a complete decision loop.
- Screener Maker (Lightweight Tools): Top-N list with Follow/alert toggles; export CSV. Include “New this week” and “Graduated” sections for churn/entry dynamics.
- Community/Content: Weekly digest highlighting new entrants, upgrades, and notable exits—link back to your product pages.
Next Steps
- Get API Key — generate a key and start free.
- Run Hello-TM — verify your first successful call.
- Clone a Template — deploy a screener or alerts bot today.
- Compare plans: Scale confidently with API plans.
FAQs
1) What does the Moonshots API return?
A list of breakout candidates with fields such as symbol, tm_grade, signal (often Bullish/Bearish), optional reason tags, and updated_at. Use it to drive discover tabs, alerts, and watchlists.
2) How fresh is the list? What about latency/SLOs?
The endpoint targets predictable latency and timely updates for dashboards and alerts. Use short-TTL caching and queued jobs/webhooks to avoid bursty polling.
3) How do I use Moonshots in a trading workflow?
Common stack: Moonshots for discovery, Trading Signals for timing, Support/Resistance for SL/TP, Quantmetrics for sizing, and Price Prediction for scenario context. Always backtest and paper-trade first.
4) I saw results like “+241%” and a “7.5% average return.” Are these guaranteed?
No. Any historical results are illustrative and not guarantees of future performance. Markets are risky; use risk management and testing.
5) Can I filter the Moonshots list?
Yes—pass parameters like min_grade, signal, and limit (as supported) to tailor to your audience and keep pages fast.
6) Do you provide SDKs or examples?
REST works with JavaScript and Python snippets above. Docs include quickstarts, Postman collections, and templates—start with Run Hello-TM.
7) Pricing, limits, and enterprise SLAs?
Begin free and scale up. See API plans for rate limits and enterprise options.
Support and Resistance API: Auto-Calculate Smart Levels for Better Trades
Most traders still draw lines by hand in TradingView. The support and resistance API from Token Metrics auto-calculates clean support and resistance levels from one request, so your dashboard, bot, or alerts can react instantly. In minutes, you’ll call /v2/resistance-support, render actionable levels for any token, and wire them into stops, targets, or notifications. Start by grabbing your key on Get API Key, then Run Hello-TM and Clone a Template to ship a production-ready feature fast.
What You’ll Build in 2 Minutes
A minimal script that fetches Support/Resistance via /v2/resistance-support for a symbol (e.g., BTC, SOL).
- A one-liner curl to smoke-test your key.
- A UI pattern to display nearest support, nearest resistance, level strength, and last updated time.
Next Endpoints to add
- /v2/trading-signals (entries/exits)
- /v2/hourly-trading-signals (intraday updates)
- /v2/tm-grade (single-score context)
- /v2/quantmetrics (risk/return framing)
Why This Matters
Precision beats guesswork. Hand-drawn lines are subjective and slow. The support and resistance API standardizes levels across assets and timeframes, enabling deterministic stops and take-profits your users (and bots) can trust.
Production-ready by design. A simple REST shape, predictable latency, and clear semantics let you add levels to token pages, automate SL/TP alerts, and build rule-based execution with minimal glue code.
Where to Find
Need the Support and Resistance data? The cURL request for it is in the top right of the API Reference for quick access.
👉 Keep momentum: Get API Key • Run Hello-TM • Clone a Template
How It Works (Under the Hood)
The Support/Resistance endpoint analyzes recent price structure to produce discrete levels above and below current price, along with strength indicators you can use for priority and styling. Query /v2/resistance-support?symbol=<ASSET>&timeframe=<HORIZON> to receive arrays of level objects and timestamps.
Polling vs webhooks. For dashboards, short-TTL caching and batched fetches keep pages snappy. For bots and alerts, use queued jobs or webhooks (where applicable) to avoid noisy, bursty polling—especially around market opens and major events.
Production Checklist
- Rate limits: Respect plan caps; add client-side throttling.
- Retries/backoff: Exponential backoff with jitter for 429/5xx; log failures.
- Idempotency: Make alerting and order logic idempotent to prevent duplicates.
- Caching: Memory/Redis/KV with short TTLs; pre-warm top symbols.
- Batching: Fetch multiple assets per cycle; parallelize within rate limits.
- Threshold logic: Add %-of-price buffers (e.g., alert at 0.3–0.5% from level).
- Error catalog: Map common 4xx/5xx to actionable user guidance; keep request IDs.
- Observability: Track p95/p99; measure alert precision (touch vs approach).
- Security: Store API keys in a secrets manager; rotate regularly.
Use Cases & Patterns
- Bot Builder (Headless): Use nearest support for stop placement and nearest resistance for profit targets. Combine with /v2/trading-signals for entries/exits and size via Quantmetrics (volatility, drawdown).
- Dashboard Builder (Product): Add a Levels widget to token pages; badge strength (e.g., High/Med/Low) and show last touch time. Color the price region (below support, between levels, above resistance) for instant context.
- Screener Maker (Lightweight Tools): “Close to level” sort: highlight tokens within X% of a strong level. Toggle alerts for approach vs breakout events.
- Risk Management: Create policy rules like “no new long if price is within 0.2% of strong resistance.” Export daily level snapshots for audit/compliance.
Next Steps
- Get API Key — generate a key and start free.
- Run Hello-TM — verify your first successful call.
- Clone a Template — deploy a levels panel or alerts bot today.
- Watch the demo: Compare plans: Scale confidently with API plans.
FAQs
1) What does the Support & Resistance API return?
A JSON payload with arrays of support and resistance levels for a symbol (and optional timeframe), each with a price and strength indicator, plus an update timestamp.
2) How timely are the levels? What are the latency/SLOs?
The endpoint targets predictable latency suitable for dashboards and alerts. Use short-TTL caching for UIs, and queued jobs or webhooks for alerting to smooth traffic.
3) How do I trigger alerts or trades from levels?
Common patterns: alert when price is within X% of a level, touches a level, or breaks beyond with confirmation. Always make downstream actions idempotent and respect rate limits.
4) Can I combine levels with other endpoints?
Yes—pair with /v2/trading-signals for timing, /v2/tm-grade for quality context, and /v2/quantmetrics for risk sizing. This yields a complete decide-plan-execute loop.
5) Which timeframe should I use?
Intraday bots prefer shorter horizons; swing/position dashboards use daily or higher-timeframe levels. Offer a timeframe toggle and cache results per setting.
6) Do you provide SDKs or examples?
Use the REST snippets above (JS/Python). The docs include quickstarts, Postman collections, and templates—start with Run Hello-TM.
7) Pricing, limits, and enterprise SLAs?
Begin free and scale as you grow. See API plans for rate limits and enterprise SLA options.
Disclaimer
This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always conduct your own research before making any trading decisions.
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NFTs Explained: What Are Non-Fungible Tokens?
NFTs, or non-fungible tokens, are gaining widespread popularity in the market for digital art and collectibles. In recent years, NFTs have become a cultural phenomenon, attracting the attention of crypto enthusiasts, digital art creators, and celebrities alike. As the Web 3.0 ecosystem continues to grow and adoption increases, many believe that NFTs will play a key role in the ownership of assets online.
So what are NFTs? Let's find out.
NFT Basics
NFTs, or non-fungible tokens, are a type of digital asset that represents ownership of something on the blockchain.
NFTs can be anything such as art, collectibles, music, profile pictures or PFP, DAO memberships, event tickets, gaming assets, virtual land, domain names, and so on. They can represent either completely digital assets or tokenized versions of assets that exist in the real world. Currently, there is a lot of excitement around using NFTs to sell virtual art.
Characteristics of NFTs
- Ownership: NFT represents digital ownership of an item on a blockchain
- Permanent: NFTs have data permanently stored within the token. This information includes images, messages, signatures, or any other data
- Programmable: An NFT can be programmed to do anything. For example, an NFT artwork might be programmed to pay the artist royalties on every secondary sale of that artwork
- Unique: NFTs are unique, and that uniqueness can be confirmed on a blockchain
How to Make an NFT
To create an NFT, or non-fungible token, you will need to first prepare your media file. NFTs can support a wide range of file types, including audio, images, and even 3D files. Some popular file types that are supported by NFTs include MP3, JPG, PNG, and GIF. You can also use 3D file formats like GLB to create NFTs that represent unique, digital objects.
Once your media is ready, you will need to set up a non-custodial wallet to securely store the cryptocurrency that you will use to buy, sell, and create NFTs. Non-custodial wallets are important because they allow you to retain control of your private keys, which are needed to access your cryptocurrency and make transactions. There are many different wallet options available, so it is important to do your research and choose one that is secure and user-friendly.
Once you have set up your wallet, you will need to buy Ethereum, or other fungible tokens depending on the blockchain being used, to cover the cost of minting your NFT. Ethereum is the most commonly used blockchain for NFTs, and it is typically the easiest to get started with. You can buy Ethereum using a variety of methods, including through a cryptocurrency exchange or from other individuals who are willing to sell.
Once you have your Ethereum, you will need to connect your wallet to an NFT marketplace like Rarible or OpenSea. These platforms allow you to easily create and mint your NFT, as well as trade and purchase NFTs created by others. To connect your wallet, simply tap the "Connect" button in the top right corner of the marketplace's website. This will create an account for you on the platform and allow you to begin creating your NFT.
To create your NFT, upload your media file to the platform and provide a description of your asset. You can choose to create a standalone piece, or create multiple NFTs of the same piece, each with its own unique characteristics. You can also set rules around royalties and other aspects of your NFT to ensure that you are fairly compensated for your work.
Once you are ready to mint your NFT, the process will require you to pay a small amount of ETH for transaction fees. This is necessary to get your NFT added to the blockchain and verified as unique. Once your NFT is minted, it will be available for trade and purchase on the marketplace. You can monitor the progress of your NFT and track its sales through your wallet or the marketplace's website.
NFT Secondary Markets
Creators make NFTs using blockchain-based minting platforms to retain more control over their creative output. Once NFTs are minted on a non-custodial wallet-compatible website, collectors and traders can sell these assets on the secondary market.
Here is a list of the most used NFT marketplaces:
- OpenSea: OpenSea is the first and largest marketplace for NFTs. OpenSea is building tools that allow consumers to trade their items, creators to launch new digital works, and developers to build rich, integrated marketplaces for their digital items. It recently announced the support for Solana-based NFTs.
- Coinbase NFT: Coinbase, a cryptocurrency exchange, recently launched its NFT marketplace in beta version to the public. This marketplace acts as a social media platform in which users can not only buy and sell NFTs but also interact with and showcase their collections using user profiles, likes, and comments.
- Solanart: Solanart is the first and largest fully-fledged NFT marketplace on Solana. Users can get quick and easy access to digital collectibles, and explore, buy, and sell NFTs that run on the Solana blockchain.
- Rarible: Rarible is a do-it-yourself NFT marketplace where you can mint NFTs when and how you please. Creators are highly favorable towards Rarible, as the minting process is free, easy, and unrestricted. Rarible’s native governance token “RARI” is used to incentivize platform users and give the community members a voice.
- Nifty Gateway: Nifty Gateway is owned by the Gemini crypto exchange and has become one of the most known NFT marketplaces lately. They focus on viral drops from artists like Beeple, Trevor Jones, Pak, and more.
- SuperRare: SuperRare (SR) is one of Ethereum’s debut crypto-art NFT marketplaces. Artists must be accepted to the platform before they can list their assets.
Notable NFT Projects
NFT-based companies have seen significant growth in recent years. Some notable examples include:
- Yuga Labs: a blockchain technology company that creates Ethereum-based NFTs and digital collectibles. Yuga's most valuable NFT collection is Bored Ape Yacht Club, which has seen a floor price of over 150 ETH at its all-time high. In addition to apes, Yuga has also created dog NFTs, mutant apes, and deeds for its Metaverse. The company recently acquired Larva Labs, bringing high-value projects like Cryptopunks and Meebits under the Yuga brand. Yuga is backed by investors like Coinbase, Samsung, and Mark Cuban.
- Doodles: a collection of 10,000 Ethereum-based NFTs created by artist BurntToast. The Doodles collection includes a wide range of visual traits, heads, costumes, and colorways. Owners of Doodles NFTs have exclusive access to new experiences like Space Doodles and Dooplicator.
- Okay Bears: a collection of 10,000 Solana-based NFTs. Ownership of an Okay Bear grants access to a community of collectors and exclusive products, merchandise, and events.
Investing in NFTs
NFTs, or non-fungible tokens, provide many benefits as an investment vehicle.
One of the main advantages of NFTs is that they allow physical objects, such as artwork, to be tokenized.
Additionally, NFTs offer greater liquidity for investors, making it easier to trade and sell their assets.
The Future of NFTs
NFTs offer a new way to represent and prove ownership of assets on the blockchain.
This technology has already been used for digital art, collectibles, and in-game assets, but it has the potential to be applied to a wide range of other industries as well. For example, tokenized real estate could provide a way for people to invest in property without the barriers to entry that currently exist.
High-end fashion brands like Louis Vuitton have also expressed interest in using NFTs to track the ownership of luxury items.
Additionally, NFTs can be used to tokenize certifications, degrees, and licenses, providing a way to securely track and maintain this sensitive data on the blockchain.
Overall, the potential applications for NFTs are nearly limitless.

How to Earn Crypto in 2024? 7 Simple Ways [Answered]
If you are looking for ways to earn free crypto this year, in 2024, this is the place to be. Yes, it is possible to earn free cryptocurrency by participating in certain activities or using certain services. For example, some websites and apps offer rewards in the form of cryptocurrency for completing tasks, such as answering surveys or watching videos.
Additionally, some cryptocurrencies, such as Bitcoin and Ethereum, can be earned through a process called mining, in which individuals use their computer's processing power to help verify and record transactions on the blockchain.
However, it is important to be cautious when seeking out opportunities to earn free cryptocurrency, as there are many scams and fraudulent schemes that claim to offer free crypto but actually steal users' personal information or funds. It is always a good idea to thoroughly research any opportunity before participating and to use only trusted and reputable sources.
How to Earn Free Crypto?
Many people never invest in cryptocurrencies due to fear of losing their money, or because they do not have enough money to invest in the first place. However, there are several ways to get cryptocurrencies for free without risking any of your own money.
Let's explore them all.
Learn and Earn Platforms
Learn and Earn platforms are a great way to earn free crypto while also gaining knowledge about the industry. These platforms, such as Coinbase and CoinMarketCap, offer users the opportunity to learn about specific coins and earn rewards in exchange.
To participate in a Learn and Earn platform, users typically need to open an account and pass a KYC verification. Once verified, users can access educational materials and quizzes on the platform, and earn rewards for completing them. These platforms regularly update their offerings, so it is important to check back frequently to see what new opportunities are available.
Airdrops
Airdrops are a popular method of earning free crypto. These are marketing campaigns drawn up by new crypto platforms to gain visibility and increase their customer base. As part of their marketing strategy, these platforms give out free coins to new and existing users in exchange for creating awareness about their project.
To qualify for an airdrop, users must typically be active crypto traders or at least have a crypto wallet. Airdrops can be a win-win for both the trading platform and the user, as the platform gains visibility and the user earns free crypto.
Play-To-Earn Games
Play-to-earn games are a fun and exciting way to earn free crypto. These games allow users to have fun while also earning rewards in the form of crypto. Examples of these games include CoinHunt World, where users can explore a digital environment and earn rewards for finding keys and answering trivia questions, and Crypto Popcoin, where users can earn rewards by grouping cryptocurrencies together and popping them.
To earn actual crypto through these games, users typically need to register their ERC-20 wallet address and have the real crypto token airdropped to their account. Some games may also allow users to earn crypto through their Coinbase account.
Cryptocurrency Dividends
Cryptocurrency dividends are a new way for investors to earn passive income through their digital assets. Similar to traditional stocks, some cryptocurrencies offer dividend payments to their holders as a reward for holding their tokens for a specific period.
These payments can be in the form of additional tokens or other cryptocurrencies, depending on the protocol. For instance, some blockchain networks offer staking rewards to users who lock up their coins to secure the network, while others distribute a portion of their transaction fees to token holders.
By earning crypto through dividends, investors can benefit from both capital appreciation and recurring income, potentially increasing their overall returns on investment. However, as with any investment, it is crucial to do thorough research and assess the risks before committing funds to any cryptocurrency project.
Credit Cards
One way to earn crypto through credit cards is by using a credit card that offers rewards or cashback in the form of cryptocurrency. Several credit card companies now offer rewards in a form of cryptocurrencies. Users can earn rewards on their purchases and then transfer the earned crypto to their digital wallet.
Another option is to use a crypto credit card, which allows users to earn rewards in cryptocurrency directly. These cards work like traditional credit cards, but instead of earning cashback or points, users earn crypto rewards that can be redeemed for various products and services.
Referral Bonuses
Referral bonuses are a common way for people to earn cryptocurrency without necessarily making a direct investment or engaging in trading. Referral programs are typically offered by cryptocurrency exchanges, wallets, and other platforms that offer a commission or bonus for referring new users to their services.
To earn crypto through referral bonuses, individuals simply need to share their unique referral links with friends, family, and acquaintances who might be interested in using the platform. When someone signs up using the link and completes certain actions, such as making a deposit or trading, the referrer receives a bonus in cryptocurrency.
Referral bonuses can vary in size and scope, but they can be a great way to earn crypto passively and without having to invest a significant amount of time or money.
Browser and Search Engine Rewards
Some search engines and browsers, such as Brave and Pre-search, offer rewards in the form of crypto for viewing ads or just browsing. This is a simple and easy way to earn free crypto without having to invest any money.
While earning free crypto can be a great way to get started in the world of cryptocurrency, it is important to be cautious. This is because not all opportunities to earn free crypto are legitimate or safe.
There are many scams and fraudulent schemes that claim to offer free crypto, but are actually designed to steal users' personal information or funds. These scams can take many forms, such as fake airdrops, fake games, or fake search engines that promise rewards but never actually deliver on them.
Conclusion
Therefore, it is important for users to carefully research and verify any opportunity to earn free crypto before participating. They should look for reputable platforms and sources, and be wary of any offers that seem too good to be true.
Additionally, users should always protect their personal information and crypto assets by using secure wallets and following best practices for online security.
Disclaimer
The information provided on this website does not constitute investment advice, financial advice, trading advice, or any other advice, and you should not treat any of the website's content as such.
Token Metrics does not recommend buying, selling, or holding any cryptocurrency. Conduct your due diligence and consult your financial advisor before making investment decisions.

What is Web 3.0? Web 1 vs Web 2 vs Web 3 | Explained
If you're wondering what is Web 3, this is the place to be.
In this article, we'll learn more about the evolution of web over time, and what's next.
Evolution of Web
Being around for 3 decades, the internet has gone through multiple stages of evolution. With each evolution comes new tools and applications relevant to modern-day users, leading us to Web 3.0.
The first generation of the web is called Web 1.0. As the earliest version of the internet, it is known as the “read-only web”. As its name implies, web users can look up facts and information and read upon it. Websites were basic and had very limited functions.
When it comes to Web 1.0, there is a lack of interactions that takes place between online internet content and internet users. Sites are not interactive and there are no contributions, alterations, or impacts that can be made by the average website visitor. Most common from the 1990s to 2005, Web 1.0 connected information with users.
This lack of interaction made Web 1.0 flat and stationary. As the name suggests, “the read-only Web” lacks the forms, visuals, controls, and interactivity we enjoy on today’s Internet. The developers of Web 1.0 sites typically build their sites and develop in text or graphic format.
Static websites and personal sites would be considered part of Web 1.0. Unlike today where many websites aim for high traffic and user return rates, content distributed on Web 1.0 may be useful but does not give people a reason to return.
Web 3.0, also known as the semantic web, is the current stage of the evolution of the web. It is characterized by the use of artificial intelligence and machine learning to create a more intuitive and personalized web experience.
Web 3.0 also enables the integration of data from multiple sources and the creation of intelligent, self-learning systems that can understand the meaning and context of information on the web. This stage of the web is still in development, but it promises to bring significant advancements in terms of user experience and the ability of the web to connect and analyze data.
Web 3.0 – The New Internet
The future stages of the internet will be built on public blockchains. Blockchains are distributed databases that are shared among a number of computer networks. Web 3.0 is decentralized, which means there is no central authority. This is possible because with Web 3.0, information is stored in multiple locations concurrently.
Additionally, because it is trustless and permissionless, anyone can interact with the web without permission from a middleman. This gives users the freedom to interact with the web privately or publicly without having to trust a middleman.
With Web 3.0, individuals finally have the ability to own and govern parts of the internet, rather than relying on companies like Google or Facebook to access it.
Web 3.0 is still very new, and we have not even come close to unlocking its full potential. Characteristics of Web 3.0 can already be seen in blockchain games, the Metaverse, and decentralized finance.
In short, Web 3.0 allows users to interact, exchange information, and securely facilitate different types of transactions without a central authority, which means that Web 3.0 users become content owners rather than just content users.
Advantages of Web 3.0
Web 3.0 offers several key benefits to users, including:
- Ownership and control of personal data and information: In Web 3.0, control and access to personal data and information is returned to the user. This means that users will have complete ownership and control over their data, while still being able to share it on a permission-based or case-by-case basis.
- Access to information from anywhere: One of the main benefits of Web 3.0 is the ability to access data and information from anywhere, using only a smartphone or computer. This technology aims to expand on current ideas and allow devices to collect and share user data, making it more widely accessible.
- Elimination of centralized control: Web 3.0 and blockchain technology allow for the creation of decentralized networks, where data is fully encrypted and unmodifiable. This eliminates the need for intermediaries, such as large companies or governments, to control user data.
- Permissionless blockchain technology: In Web 3.0, anyone can create an address and interact with the blockchain network with complete privacy and security. This means that users are not required to go through any kind of verification process, such as KYC checks, in order to access and use blockchain services.
- Constant availability of services: The use of decentralized networks and encrypted data storage in Web 3.0 means that services are less likely to be suspended or disrupted. Since there is no single point of failure, service disruption is minimized and users have constant access to their data.
Disadvantages of Web 3.0
However, there are also disadvantages to Web 3.0, including:
- Potential for increased cyber attacks: Decentralized networks and encrypted data storage make it more difficult for hackers to access and modify user data. However, this also makes it more difficult for security experts to detect and prevent attacks.
- Need for infrastructure changes: In order for Web 3.0 to be fully adopted, significant changes to current infrastructure will be necessary. This includes changes to network protocols and the development of new software and hardware.
- Early stage of development: Web 3.0 is still in its early stages of development, and has yet to be widely adopted. This means that there are still many challenges and uncertainties associated with the technology.
- Lack of understanding and education: Many people are not familiar with the concept of Web 3.0 and the benefits it offers. This lack of understanding can make it difficult for the technology to gain widespread acceptance.
Key Takeaways
The development of Web 3.0 represents a significant advancement in technology, offering users the ability to read, write, and own data and information. This technology is still in its early stages, but has the potential to break into other industries and change the way we think about data and information ownership. While there are benefits to using Web 3.0, there are also risks involved.
It is up to individuals to determine whether the rewards of using this technology outweigh the potential drawbacks. Overall, the development of Web 3.0 is a major event in the history of modern technology.

How To Find New Crypto Coins? Finding Cryptocurrency Projects
If you are wondering how to find new crypto coins, this is the place to be.
Finding new crypto coins has become important since the rise of Bitcoin and the wealth gained by early investors. The crypto market has experienced a surge of new investors who hope to find the next big coin, but many are unsure of how to navigate the space and identify new coins. It can be exciting to discover new coins, but it's important to beware of scams like the Squid token that exploited the popularity of the Squid Game movie series. Before looking for new crypto coins, here are some points to consider before making an investment decision.
Checklist Before Investing:
A project's whitepaper is a good starting point for researching a new crypto project. Most new crypto projects have a whitepaper or official document that includes information such as the project's use case, tokenomics, team members, and roadmap. The presence or absence of a whitepaper can tell you a lot about the project's seriousness. While reading a project's whitepaper, there are a few things to look out for:
Use case: This is the main problem that the crypto project is trying to solve, or its unique function. For example, there are several Layer 2 projects that aim to improve the low latency and transaction times of traditional blockchains without compromising security and decentralization.
Tokenomics / Token Economics: This is the basic plan for how the project's new crypto tokens will be distributed. This includes how many tokens will go to the founding team, advisors, how many will be available for sale to the community, how many will be in the treasury, and what type of token it will be (deflationary or inflationary, with a limited or unlimited supply).
Lock-up period: This is the period of time that the founding team agrees to lock up their tokens before they can access them. A longer lock-up period can give investors more confidence in the project's long-term commitment.
Founding team: It's important to check the background of the project's founding team. Are they experienced, do their backgrounds match the project, and do they have any fraudulent history with past projects? The profiles of the advisors and investors/backers of the project can also be useful.
Social virality: Decentralization is at the core of crypto, so projects are often community-driven. The growth of the project's community can be a good indicator of investor confidence. Twitter, Telegram, and Discord are popular platforms for building crypto communities.
Roadmap: The project's roadmap contains its major plans and timeline. This can indicate the project's seriousness, especially when compared to what they have accomplished. Have they achieved any of the earlier plans on the roadmap within the specified timeline?
In addition, looking at the number of people on the project's watchlist, and whether it is listed on CoinMarketCap.com or CoinGecko, can also be a good confidence booster.
How to Find New Crypto Coins
Before new crypto coins are listed on exchanges, they are often first offered as Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs), Initial Exchange Offerings (IEOs), or Initial Dex Offerings (IDOs). These offerings give investors the opportunity to get in early on projects before they go mainstream. This is where early investors can get into major projects before they are listed on crypto exchanges.
There are several platforms that feature upcoming crypto projects, including:
- Top ICO List: This website provides white papers and one-pagers of ICOs of new crypto coins. You can find a comprehensive list of ICOs and information on some of the best ICOs in the market, as well as information on past ICOs to use as a benchmark for evaluating the performance of ICOs you are considering.
- CoinGecko: This is a useful tool for crypto traders and investors to stay up to date with the market. It provides real-time prices of cryptocurrencies from multiple exchanges, as well as other important information about different cryptocurrencies, such as their historic performance data, community, and insights into the coin development. CoinGecko also provides an ICO list of new crypto coins with relevant information about the new crypto coin/project.
- CoinMarketCap: Like CoinGecko, CoinMarketCap is an alternative that some investors use to find new crypto coins. It provides a list of ICOs and relevant information, as well as information on hundreds of other crypto projects and actionable data. The watchlist feature is also useful for seeing how many people are interested in a project.
- ICO Bench: This is a useful tool for finding new crypto coins. ICO Bench is an ICO grading website that uses crowdsourced ratings from crypto traders and experts. The experts evaluate projects using various parameters and grade them accordingly.
- Token Metrics: Token Metrics is another great resource for finding new cryptocurrencies with its research, deep dives, AI, and more. The best part is that you can use Token Metrics to evaluate whether the newly found project is good or bad and decide whether you should spend more time researching it further.
With over 10,000+ crypto coins, there are many opportunities out there. But there are also many shady platforms and crypto projects, so it's important to know how to find crypto with potential and make sure the projects are viable. Using the tips above can help you do that.
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Token Metrics Media LLC is a regular publication of information, analysis, and commentary focused especially on blockchain technology and business, cryptocurrency, blockchain-based tokens, market trends, and trading strategies.
Token Metrics Media LLC does not provide individually tailored investment advice and does not take a subscriber’s or anyone’s personal circumstances into consideration when discussing investments; nor is Token Metrics Advisers LLC registered as an investment adviser or broker-dealer in any jurisdiction.
Information contained herein is not an offer or solicitation to buy, hold, or sell any security. The Token Metrics team has advised and invested in many blockchain companies. A complete list of their advisory roles and current holdings can be viewed here: https://tokenmetrics.com/disclosures.html/
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All investing involves risk, including the possible loss of money you invest, and past performance does not guarantee future performance. Ratings and price predictions are provided for informational and illustrative purposes, and may not reflect actual future performance.