Let me ask you something:
Do you delete old wallets? Abandon failed contracts? Burn tokens just to tidy up?
Because I don’t.
Never have. Never will.
I keep it all. Every byte of it.
Call it hoarding. Call it superstition. I call it on-chain composting.
Because in crypto, trash becomes treasure all the time.
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A dead NFT project gets revived because some YouTuber stumbles onto it
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A memecoin nobody cared about in 2021 suddenly trends on TikTok
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A broken contract turns into an ironic collectible worth $200
You think that’s rare? It’s not.
Value is weird here.
People pay for cursed wallets, glitched tokens, even failed DAO membership cards. If it’s old, obscure, or ugly enough—it’s got a market.
So I keep:
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Broken NFTs with no metadata
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Coins I can’t swap anywhere
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Testnet artifacts from long-dead chains
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“Failed” mints that never confirmed
Why?
Because that’s digital dirt.
And dirt grows strange things.
Some day, some degenerate’s gonna say, “Bro, remember that cursed JPG drop from 2022 that bricked half the wallets? I’m buying those now.”
And I’ll be ready.
Not because I’m smart.
Because I’m a digital rat with a hoarder’s heart.
So no, I don’t tidy up my wallets.
I let them rot. I let them grow. I let them mutate.
Because somewhere in that mess, the next artifact’s already forming.
Hold your trash.
Cherish your garbage.
You’re not broke—you’re pre-rich.
Stay filthy,
A.B. Gobling

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