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Crypto for Beginners (100 episodes)

Crypto for Beginners (100 episodes)

By: Crypto Robbie
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Welcome to The Top 100 Cryptocurrencies For Beginners. The ultimate crypto podcast for anyone looking to master digital currencies without the hype. Launched by a seasoned crypto vet who’s been in the game since 2013, this show breaks down the top 100 cryptocurrencies by market cap as of March 25, 2025, with clear, beginner-friendly explanations and real-world use cases. Whether you’re new to Bitcoin or curious about altcoins like Sei and SuperVerse, each ~25-minute episode unpacks one coin’s story, tech, and potential—perfect for building your crypto knowledge from the ground up.Crypto Robbie
Episodes
  • Episode 93 — Movement (MOVE) — The Blockchain Reinventing Itself
    Jun 29 2026

    EPISODE 93 — Movement (MOVE) — The Blockchain Reinventing Itself


    Movement launched in late 2024 as an Ethereum Layer 2 using the Move programming language, raised significant venture capital, generated enormous community anticipation — and then ran into one of the most damaging token launch controversies of the current cycle. A market-making arrangement that should have provided liquidity for the MOVE token ended up enriching insiders at the expense of ordinary buyers. The founders departed under pressure. New leadership took over. And in June 2026, Movement announced it was no longer a crypto company — it was targeting the $685 billion global remittance market as a regulated financial payments business.


    In this episode of Crypto for Beginners, we tell the complete Movement story. We explain what the Move programming language is and what security advantages it offers over Ethereum's Solidity — particularly how its resource-oriented model prevents entire categories of smart contract vulnerabilities that have cost DeFi billions over the years. We cover the original Layer 2 launch and the technical proposition that attracted so much early attention.


    We explain the MOVE token controversy: what the market-making arrangement involved, what the evidence showed about how it functioned, why ordinary buyers were disadvantaged, and what the community and media response looked like. We cover the leadership transition, what Move Industries has committed to, and how the team has attempted to rebuild trust. We then explain the pivot in full: what targeting the remittance market means in practice, what regulatory licences in the US, Canada, and EU require to obtain, how the partnership with Circle for USDC settlement fits into the strategy, and what execution challenges face a project rebuilding trust while simultaneously constructing regulated financial infrastructure from scratch.


    Keywords: Movement crypto explained, MOVE token, Move language blockchain, Movement MOVE controversy, Movement pivot payments, remittance crypto blockchain, stablecoin payments, Movement Labs 2026, Ethereum Layer 2 Move, MOVE token launch controversy, cross border crypto payments, Circle USDC partnership, crypto payments 2026, Move Industries, blockchain remittance market, MOVE price, Move language security, Movement blockchain, Layer 2 Move EVM, crypto project controversy rebuild

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    12 mins
  • Episode 92 — What Is Crypto Mining — and Is It Still Worth It?
    Jun 28 2026

    EPISODE 92 — What Is Crypto Mining — and Is It Still Worth It?


    When Bitcoin launched in 2009, you could mine it on a standard home computer. The block reward was 50 Bitcoin per block — worth millions of dollars at today's prices. Today, mining a single Bitcoin block requires enormous data centres filled with specialised ASIC hardware, consuming as much electricity as a small city, operated by publicly traded companies with billion-dollar balance sheets. The landscape has changed beyond recognition — and for most ordinary people, it has changed in ways that make mining far harder to profit from than popular understanding suggests.


    In this episode of Crypto for Beginners, we explain how Bitcoin mining actually works and give you an honest assessment of whether it makes sense in 2026. We cover the Proof of Work consensus mechanism — the mathematical puzzle miners compete to solve, why brute-force computation is the only approach, and how the difficulty adjustment automatically ensures a new block is found every 10 minutes regardless of how much computing power joins the network. We explain the hardware evolution from CPUs to GPUs to ASICs — what an ASIC actually is, why it dominates Bitcoin mining today, and what the leading machines achieve in joules per terahash efficiency in 2026.


    We cover the April 2024 halving — how cutting the block reward from 6.25 to 3.125 Bitcoin affected mining economics — and what electricity cost threshold determines profitability at current prices. We explain mining pools: why they exist, how proportional reward sharing works, and why solo mining Bitcoin is impractical for almost anyone. We cover GPU mining on ASIC-resistant coins like Monero as a more accessible alternative for individual participants. We end with cloud mining — how the model works, why most offerings disappoint or deceive, and the specific red flags that identify problematic services before you commit money.


    Keywords: Bitcoin mining explained, how does crypto mining work, is Bitcoin mining profitable 2026, ASIC mining explained, GPU mining 2026, mining pool crypto, crypto mining beginner, Bitcoin halving mining impact, electricity cost Bitcoin mining, home Bitcoin mining, proof of work explained, crypto mining hardware, Bitcoin mining profitability, Monero mining GPU, cloud mining scam warning, Bitcoin block reward, mining difficulty, hashrate explained, ASIC vs GPU mining, crypto mining worth it 2026

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    12 mins
  • Episode 91 — Pyth Network — The Real-Time Data Oracle
    Jun 27 2026

    EPISODE 91 — Pyth Network — The Real-Time Data Oracle


    Every DeFi lending protocol needs to know whether your collateral is still worth enough to keep your loan open — right now, not fifteen minutes ago. Every on-chain derivatives platform needs the exact asset price at the moment of settlement. Every prediction market needs the actual outcome of a real-world event to resolve correctly. Blockchains cannot look any of this up themselves — they are closed systems that only know about transactions that occur on-chain. Oracles are the infrastructure that brings real-world data onto blockchains. And Pyth Network has become the dominant oracle for high-frequency financial applications across the entire crypto ecosystem.


    In this episode of Crypto for Beginners, we explain what oracles are and why they are one of the most critical pieces of infrastructure in DeFi. We cover the oracle problem — the fundamental challenge of bringing off-chain data onto a blockchain in a way that is trustworthy, accurate, and resistant to manipulation — and why getting this wrong has caused hundreds of millions in protocol exploits over the years. We explain how Pyth's pull-based architecture works differently from older push-based oracles: instead of publishing data on a fixed schedule, Pyth allows smart contracts to request the latest price on demand, with the freshness cryptographically verifiable at the moment of the request.


    We cover Pyth's data provider network: over 100 first-party contributors including major trading firms, market makers, and exchanges who publish price data directly from their own order books — making Pyth's prices more accurate and harder to manipulate than oracles that aggregate from third-party sources. We explain the PYTH token — its role in governance, staking for data quality assurance, and the fee model that rewards high-quality contribution. We cover Pyth's expansion to over 50 blockchains and why it has become the default oracle for most new DeFi protocols building on any chain.


    Keywords: Pyth Network explained, PYTH token, crypto oracle explained, what is a blockchain oracle, Pyth vs Chainlink, oracle problem blockchain, DeFi price feeds, real time crypto data, Pyth Network 2026, oracle network crypto, how does DeFi get price data, PYTH staking, decentralised oracle, on-chain data feeds, oracle manipulation attack, pull oracle vs push oracle, Pyth data providers, DeFi oracle beginner, oracle solution blockchain, PYTH governance

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    13 mins
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