$BTC just had its first weekly close below $60,000 in almost two years With ETFs seeing outflows and talks that Strategy could also become a seller, it's no surprise the market is turning cautious. Personally, I wouldn't rule out a move toward $50K before we see any serious attempt at reclaiming $100K. Markets rarely move in a straight line, especially when sentiment is this weak. Times like this remind me that bear markets aren't just about price they're about patience. While the charts are full of fear, I've noticed builders are still shipping. That's one thing I like about @ston_fi . Even with the market under pressure, development hasn't slowed down. Cross-chain is expanding through Omniston, new apps are integrating its infrastructure, and liquidity continues to find its way into the TON ecosystem. For me, that's the difference between watching the market and watching the ecosystem. Prices can stay weak for a while. But the projects that keep building through uncertainty are usually the ones people talk about when the next cycle begins. So yes, I'm watching Bitcoin closely… But I'm also paying attention to what keeps growing while everyone else is focused on the charts. $SOL #Altcoin Season#
$RAVE is starting to catch my attention again It's back among the hot tokens and slowly building momentum. If buyers keep stepping in, I wouldn't be surprised to see it make a run toward the $0.5 zone. For now, I'm just watching to see if this momentum can hold. While keeping an eye on the charts, another update caught my attention. Omniston now connects TON users to Polymarket through the Predict Telegram Mini App. What I like about this isn't just the integration it's how simple the experience becomes. Users can open prediction market positions using $USDT on TON without worrying about bridges, switching wallets, or moving across multiple platforms. Everything happens behind the scenes, with Omniston handling the cross-chain execution. To me, that's where DeFi is heading. The technology is still there, but users don't have to think about it anymore. They just use the app, and the infrastructure does the heavy lifting. Whether I'm watching tokens like $RAVE or exploring new tools on TON, it's clear the ecosystem is moving toward making crypto feel simpler for everyday users. And honestly, that's the kind of progress that matters most. #Altcoin Season#
Hyper Foundation is putting serious money behind ecosystem growth They've announced $10 million in grants to help builders migrate from $USDH to $USDC . At first glance, it might just look like a stablecoin migration. But to me, it shows something bigger. Strong ecosystems understand that liquidity is everything. When liquidity is fragmented, users suffer, builders face more friction, and growth slows down. That's why projects are increasingly willing to invest heavily in making transitions smoother for both developers and users. It reminds me of what we're seeing on @ston_fi with Omniston and cross-chain development. The goal isn't just to move assets around. It's to make liquidity more accessible and reduce the friction that comes with operating across different ecosystems. The easier it becomes for value to move, the easier it becomes for builders to focus on creating products instead of worrying about infrastructure. Whether it's Hyper Foundation helping projects migrate toward USDC or STONfi expanding cross-chain liquidity on TON, the trend feels very similar: Less fragmentation. More accessible liquidity. Better user experience. At the end of the day, the projects that make it easiest for capital and users to move are usually the ones that attract the most activity. And right now, that's becoming one of the most important battles in crypto. #Altcoin Season# #TON
How Cross-Chain Is Making Fundraising Easier on GRAM in your style. A while back, if a project was raising funds on one blockchain, that was pretty much where your journey started and ended. If your assets were on another chain, you first had to figure out how to bridge them, pay extra fees, and hope everything arrived safely before you could even participate. For a lot of people, that was enough to make them give up. The project might have been interesting, but the process wasn't. That's why I think updates like this deserve more attention. Gram Store, a launchpad for Telegram Mini Apps, now uses Omniston to power cross-chain deposits. What that means in simple terms is that users can bring funds from networks like Base, Polygon, and BNB Chain into GRAM as part of the fundraising process. It sounds like a small technical update, but it solves a real problem. Instead of liquidity being locked away on different chains, it becomes much easier for people to support new projects without jumping through multiple hoops. The part I found even more interesting comes after the fundraising. When a project reaches its target and graduates, the raised liquidity doesn't just sit idle. It goes directly into STON.fi liquidity pools, with the LP tokens locked for 6–12 months. That creates a healthier start for new projects. Instead of launching with thin liquidity and immediate uncertainty, they begin with a stronger trading foundation that users can actually interact with. To me, that's the bigger story. Cross-chain isn't just about moving tokens from one blockchain to another. It's about making it easier for builders to raise capital, for users to participate, and for new projects to enter the ecosystem with real liquidity from day one. That's the kind of infrastructure people don't always notice. $RE $XRP #Altcoin Season#