Most creator coins fail because they're designed around the creator.
The creator gets paid.
The community gets the volatility.
Everyone talks about "community," but the only use case is usually speculation, staking, burning, or hoping more buyers show up.
That's why the model never felt sustainable to me.
What interested me about
@flipcash was a different idea:
What if a currency was built to be used instead of traded?
That's why I created
$SIMPLE.
I don't earn creator fees from it.
I have to buy it like everyone else.
The goal isn't to extract value from the community.
The goal is to create a community currency that can be used for rewards, peer-to-peer payments, and future experiences like
@solanamidwest events.
Flipcash approaches this differently through reserve-backed community currencies powered by USDF. Instead of relying entirely on speculation, the system is designed around utility and participation.
$SIMPLE doesn't need a $100M market cap.
It doesn't need influencers.
It doesn't need hype.
It just needs people who find value in using it.
If more people join the community and more people use the currency, everyone benefits from a stronger network.
That's the vision that resonates with me.
Not a creator coin.
A
@solana community currency.
Digital cash for a community.
flipdash.cash/chart?mint=Hgd…