Crypto Assets: What They Are, How They Work, and Which Ones Still Matter

When people talk about crypto assets, digital holdings stored on blockchains that can be traded, earned, or used as proof of ownership. Also known as digital assets, they include everything from Bitcoin to tokens that give you access to a decentralized app. Not all crypto assets are created equal. Some hold real value because they solve problems—like paying for gas on Ethereum or earning interest in DeFi. Others? They’re just hype with a logo.

Real crypto assets need three things: utility, liquidity, and transparency. Take DeFi, a system of financial tools built on blockchains without banks. Tokens like VELO or SIL aren’t just speculative bets—they’re keys to earning yields, swapping coins, or voting on protocol changes. Then there’s blockchain, the public ledger that makes crypto assets secure and traceable. Without it, a token is just a number in a database with no proof it’s real. That’s why posts here dig into exchanges like KyberSwap or Velodrome—they test whether the underlying chain actually supports what’s being claimed.

Some crypto assets vanish overnight. PureVidz, AIOSHI, ATLAZ—they had whitepapers, Twitter hype, and promises. But no trading volume, no audits, no team. These aren’t investments; they’re traps disguised as opportunities. Meanwhile, assets tied to real-world use cases—like Bitcoin mining in Iran to bypass sanctions, or tokens used in Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 projects—have staying power because they’re tied to actual demand. Even meme coins like VoldemortTrumpRobotnik-10Neko get attention, but only because they show how wild the market can get when speculation runs unchecked.

What you’ll find below isn’t a list of hot coins. It’s a collection of real-world checks: which crypto assets are still active, which exchanges actually support them, and which ones are already dead but still floating around in search results. You’ll see reviews of DEXs that work, airdrops you can actually claim, and deep dives into tokens that matter—not just those with the flashiest websites. If you’re tired of guessing what’s real, you’re in the right place.

Asher Draycott
Oct
29

How Courts Are Treating Crypto Assets: Property, Securities, and Jurisdictional Battles in 2025

Courts around the world are deciding whether crypto is property, a security, or something new. Australia recognizes it as property. U.S. courts focus on exchange type and securities law. Jurisdictional battles and SEC pressure are shaping the future.