When I started $BULL, I didn’t have a perfect roadmap or some VC-backed launch plan.
What I had was frustration, conviction — and a belief that if I told the truth, people would eventually listen.
That belief became the backbone of this project.
Sometimes, the simplest moments hold the deepest wisdom.
Radical Transparency, Even When It Hurt
I made mistakes early on.
Mint authority? Gone.
Liquidity? Poor.
Pricing? Off.
I could have hidden it. Pretended it was part of the plan.
But I didn’t. I shared screenshots. Admitted fault. Explained everything — in real-time.
When something didn’t go as expected, I posted about it. Not with spin, but with clarity.


The 30% Burn: Not a Marketing Move
At one point, I burned 30% of the total $BULL supply.
Why? Because I wanted to fix a mistake. The token had launched with an unfair distribution. This wasn’t about pump tactics. It was about restoring balance — even if it meant sacrifice.
And people noticed.
Honesty Built the Community
People joined not because $BULL was perfect — but because it was honest.
They saw me posting at 2am, replying to every comment, trying to make things right.
Builders. Creators. Traders. Even skeptics — they stuck around.
Because this wasn’t just another meme coin.
It was a mirror: showing both flaws and growth, mistakes and effort.
Wrapping Up With Key Insights
Here’s what I’ve learned:
- Being real attracts real people.
- Mistakes don’t kill a project — hiding them does.
- When you show your work, people respect it.
$BULL is still growing. But it’s honest growth.
And in crypto, that’s rare.
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