In the latest video, “If You Missed Monad Airdrop, Watch This,” the creator opens with excitement: “This could be your chance to make thousands of dollars in a few months.” He stresses that the Monad public sale isn’t just another token launch but Coinbase’s first global public sale experiment. It’s more than a technical or investment event—it’s a shift that returns trust to retail investors. With U.S. users allowed to participate for the first time, the boundary between regulation and decentralization is being redrawn.
The video notes that the Monad public sale will be held on Coinbase on November 17, open to participants in over 80 countries. Simple on paper, but significant in practice: Coinbase is testing a model of “governed decentralization”—a global public offering within a compliant framework. It signals the coexistence of compliance and freedom, and suggests retail investors may gain more early-stage access under official rules.
If the model works, it becomes a trust template for Web3: whoever balances risk and transparency best can redefine “fair issuance.”
According to the video, Monad will release 7.5% of total supply at $0.025 per token, with purchase limits from $100 to $100,000. The target raise is $187.5 million, and the team has reportedly raised over $220 million previously.
The core of this setup: low entry price, limited supply, transparent lockups—lowering barriers while encouraging participants to signal trust rather than pure arbitrage.
There’s also a subtle rule highlighted in the video:
If you dump your entire allocation on day one, Coinbase may reduce your eligibility for future public sales.
This is a behavioral-incentive experiment that makes holding a signal, not just a trade.
The video references Sui (2023): a $35 contribution yielded 1,500 tokens, which spiked to $2 at launch—nearly a 100× return. Still, the creator emphasizes Monad’s steadier pricing: at $0.025, compared with a Binance presale at $0.05, there’s a potential ~100% immediate spread. If fully valued in line with StarkNet or Arbitrum, a launch price in the $0.20–$0.50 range is conceivable.
These comparisons are more than trading trivia; they preview confidence stratification—retail behavior is being learned and priced by algorithms.
Participants are warned that a day-one full exit may hurt future access. That isn’t just price stabilization; it’s a loyalty test. Coinbase is building a “trusted user circle” through actions—those with stable behavior earn higher-tier opportunities.
His conclusion is clear and candid: “It’s a good opportunity, but it’s your call.” It reflects a maturing, post-bull-market mood—investing is less about adrenaline and more about judgment and patience.
Financial analyst Dr. Aaron Smith suggests Monad’s approach hints at the next cycle of crypto fundraising: “Token public sales will become a compliant finance gray zone.” Two shifts stand out:
This model could spread across exchanges: the steadier your behavior, the higher your trust score, the larger your allocation. Web3 is incubating a new credit system—algorithmic, not bank-issued.
While the video doesn’t name AI, the mechanics echo AI trust modeling. Systems like Anthropic Claude 3 Opus and GPT-5 can analyze wallet patterns, flag risk behaviors, and distinguish short-term speculators from long-term participants. Allocation may soon shift from applications to AI evaluation:
Stable behavior, authentic interactions, controlled risk—these traits could earn higher allocation weights.
It’s a move from human trust chains to machine-assessed trust, with AI as referee.
The final line resonates: “It’s your money, and your decision.” Familiar words, but they underscore crypto’s core truth—freedom arrives with responsibility. Monad’s public sale may be less a launch than an experiment in trust, behavior, and fairness. In this market rhythm, MasLogin is becoming essential—protecting privacy and enabling stable, multi-platform operations so each interaction is recognized as genuine, making the trust economy real.
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