Liam casually placed his phone on the table. The screen still displayed his wallet, and Jack caught a glimpse of it by accident—his breath hitching when he realized Liam had over a hundred thousand dollars in there.
"I have the intention, but I can’t co up with an interesting idea. What I’m looking for is sothing that seems simple at first, but if pushed hard enough, has huge potential," Liam continued.
The more Liam spoke, the more Jack realized he was serious.
He fell silent, thinking hard.
When it ca to generating ideas, Jack was indeed better—he was the creative type.
Then suddenly, he took out his phone and typed sothing.
After a mont, he showed the screen to Liam.
It was ChatGPT, asked to generate a image.
The result was a yellow brain with a face... smoking.
"I call it MindChain. It’s not purely a coin—it has a project behind it," Jack explained.
"What’s the project?" Liam asked.
"The idea is to use transaction fees for trading. If there’s profit, part of it gets distributed to holders. What do you think?" Jack smiled.
"That way, the more profit it generates, the more popular it becos. Of course, to build capital faster, we’ll need a higher transaction fee—maybe 5%."
"What if it doesn’t make a profit?" Luna asked.
"Then no one will be interested," Jack admitted. "But Liam seems to always profit."
He glanced again at Liam’s phone.
One thing was clear—out of the ten or so coins Liam had bought, all of them were going up.
Not to ntion, he had already bought a car—and even Luna was now dating him.
Jack was certain Liam’s profits from yesterday until now were far greater than he imagined.
He wanted to see if this was real.
That’s why he proposed this idea.
And Liam couldn’t help but feel intrigued.
It was sowhat similar to Pointclick—but that one distributed fees directly, resulting in relatively small returns.
Developers normally wouldn’t risk trading with collected fees.
There was no guarantee of profit. And if they lost, there would be nothing to distribute.
But for Liam...
That wasn’t a problem.
"Liam, if you’re interested, I’ll start building the system so everything runs automatically. But it’ll require so capital," Jack said.
"How much?" Liam asked without hesitation.
"Let’s start with 1,500 dollars. I’ll build the system. We’ll have a website showing total transaction fees, profits generated, and distributions to holders. The core of this system will be your wallet—it’ll receive fees and handle the trading. You should create a new wallet and integrate it with a bot that can distribute tokens to millions of wallets at once. Later, you’ll launch the coin using that wallet," Jack explained.
Liam nodded several tis.
He created a second wallet under the sa account. The app allowed multiple wallets per account.
Since he already subscribed to a bot, he didn’t need another one—just integrate the new wallet.
"Where do you think we should create the coin?" Liam asked.
There were many platforms now that allowed instant token creation across different networks.
"Anywhere simple is fine. But I think it’s better to launch on three or more networks. If it explodes, we’ll already be everywhere," Jack said.
"Makes sense..." Liam agreed. "But how do we integrate them?"
Major coins existed across multiple chains. Liam didn’t fully understand how that worked.
He had never really cared—until now.
"Easy. BridgeChain offers that service. But for sothing like this, you’ll need to pay 500 dollars to create it and add at least 5,000 dollars in locked liquidity. It’s basically for serious projects," Jack explained.
"I see."
Liam searched for BridgeChain. It didn’t have a mobile app, so he accessed it through the browser.
After logging in with his second wallet, he explored its features.
With one click, he was prompted to fill out details: na, Twitter account, website, group links, Discord, and more.
So fields were optional, but the essentials were the coin’s na, image, and network selection.
It also allowed developers to set transaction fees—up to a maximum of 5%.
Liam decided to wait. He would launch it after Jack finished building the system.
He transferred around 10,000 dollars into his second wallet.
"When will the site be ready?" Liam asked.
"This afternoon or tonight. I’ll work on it all day," Jack said, wiping the sweat forming on his forehead.
"Alright, I’ll send the money to your bank account," Liam replied.
Jack imdiately showed his bank QR code. Liam scanned it and transferred 1,500 dollars.
"Liam, rember—I own 20% of this project," Jack added.
"Don’t worry," Liam replied casually.
"I’ll buy 51% of the supply at launch—let’s say 510 million tokens. That ans you’ll own 20% of that. Of course, you can also buy your own share separately."
"Haha, perfect... Alright, I’ll head ho and start working. I’ll contact you once everything’s ready," Jack said, skipping breakfast entirely as he left.
"Liam, if this generates profit, it’ll definitely go viral," Luna comnted.
"Yeah... if it generates profit. What if it doesn’t? Who can guarantee constant profit?" Liam replied with a chuckle.
Luna hesitated, unsure what to say.
Because so far...
Liam had never been wrong.
After breakfast, they left right away.
They headed to an electronics store, though not the one Liam had visited the day before.
"You are going to pay for , right?" Luna asked with a faint smile as she was about to step out of the car.
"Do I look like a liar?" Liam replied.
"Of course not..." Luna chuckled.
They got out together and entered the store.
Liam himself wanted to buy a laptop. He figured it would be better to have one.
At ho, trading on a laptop would be far more convenient than using his phone.
He quickly picked a high-end gaming laptop—one of the best-performing models currently available among devices with similar specifications.
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