It started with a Bitcoin investment. Like a lot of people, that was the entry point. But unlike a lot of people, I didn't stop at the price chart. What pulled me in was the technology underneath it and the broader ethos of what Web3 was actually trying to do. From there it was a rabbit hole, and I never really came back out.
What I've built over the years is a broad, systems-level understanding of how decentralized ecosystems work. Not the kind that comes from following price action and reading Twitter threads, but from spending real time on the underlying mechanics: how protocols are designed, what structural flaws cause most token economies to eventually break down, and why so few have managed to hold up across more than one market cycle.
Not the kind that comes from following price action. The kind that holds across market cycles.
The areas I know well span most of the major sectors. On the infrastructure side, I've spent a lot of time studying different blockchain ecosystems (Ethereum and EVM chains, Bitcoin, MultiversX, Cosmos, Injective, Avalanche, and Solana), not in isolation, but with a focus on how they position themselves, what tradeoffs they make, and how they connect to each other.
Cross-chain infrastructure and interoperability has been a consistent thread throughout, because the multi-chain reality means you can't understand any one network without understanding how they all relate.
DeFi is probably where my knowledge goes deepest. Lending and borrowing protocols, liquid staking, yield generation, liquidity provision, tokenomics, stablecoins, governance models, capital efficiency, risk management. I've also spent time on Real World Asset tokenization: the intersection of blockchain and traditional finance, the idea of bringing things like real estate or securities on-chain through fractional ownership models.
Given my background in macroeconomics and financial markets, that crossover between DeFi and traditional financial infrastructure is the part I find most interesting.
GameFi, NFTs, and governance are areas I understand well from both the research side and the practical side. At Entity Finance, a lot of the community and content work was built around explaining these concepts to people who were new to the space. That experience of translating complex mechanics into something accessible has been as valuable as the knowledge itself.
I've always been more interested in understanding why a system is designed a certain way than in learning how to use it. How value gets created. How incentives shape behavior. What actually causes most token economies to collapse, and why genuine long-term sustainability in this space is still more of an open question than the industry likes to admit.
That framing has helped me evaluate new protocols and trends based on how they actually function rather than on whatever narrative the market is running with at a given moment.
How value gets created. How incentives shape behavior.