Build My Ideas
I have products in my head that solve real problems. They just need time, focus, and not having to worry about rent while building them.
A Social Experiment
No sob story. No charity. No scam.
Just one person, the internet, and the most honest ask you'll ever see.
Yes. I'm asking strangers on the internet to send me money. No, I don't have a "good reason."
I'm not sick. My house didn't burn down. Nobody's dying. I'm a regular person with a job, a head full of ideas, and the nerve to do what nobody does: ask without pretending.
Every day, billions of dollars move across the planet. People drop $7 on coffee without blinking. Someone bought a $12 million JPEG of a monkey. And here I am thinking:
"What if I just... asked? No begging. No guilt trips. No fake charity. Just a page that says: I'd like to be rich. Here's my wallet. Do whatever you want with that."
So here we are. This is that page. Welcome to makemerich.wtf.
This isn't really about money. It's a question wearing a website.
Look around. We live in a world where:
In this world, is it really insane to think someone might see this page and go: "Sure. Why not."
That's what I'm testing. Not whether I deserve it. I probably don't. But neither did a cartoon dog on a coin. The question is whether pure honesty can do what algorithms and ad budgets do every day.
"People fund meme coins, pixel art, and digital apes.
Is funding a real human really the craziest option?"
I build things for a living.
Software, websites, apps, systems. I've been doing it for over 15 years. I've turned other people's ideas into working products more times than I can count. And every single time I thought: "When do I get to build mine?"
I'm staying anonymous on purpose. Not hiding. But if you knew my name, you'd Google me, judge me, and turn this into a debate about whether I'm worthy enough. That misses the point.
The real question is: does it matter who's asking? If someone on the internet is completely honest about what they want, does your answer change based on their face, their age, their country?
(That's part of the experiment too.)
Fair. Not a pitch deck. Just the truth.
I have products in my head that solve real problems. They just need time, focus, and not having to worry about rent while building them.
A home. Stability. The ability to wake up and create instead of survive. Not luxury, just the freedom to think bigger than next month's bills.
Fund other people's experiments. Help someone else who has ideas but no resources. If this works, it should ripple.
I'm not going to blow it on a Lambo. Smart investments, sustainable growth. The goal isn't to be rich once. It's to never need to ask again.
Will I publish exact breakdowns? Yes. Every milestone unlocks full transparency reports. Blockchain doesn't lie, and neither will I.
There's no cap. No finish line. Just levels, and every level is a new chapter.
Someone actually sent something. The experiment is real.
Multiple humans decided this was worth something.
First transparency report published.
Video update. Full transparency report. The experiment gets real.
Full breakdown of how every dollar was used. First startup launched.
Documentary. Pay-it-forward fund launched. The experiment proved something.
There is no cap. There is no end. Only the question: what happens next?
Real transactions. Real blockchain. Nothing fake here.
Every address that ever sent something. You could be next.
$1 or $1,000,000. Everything is recorded on the blockchain forever. You're not just donating. You're saying "why not" with your wallet.
TCtY5U8wAsUbKvNt8nov9JqwZUrEeA96Gh
12t35jo2Dhy1LsGyhKoy5QQ6igxSmrnZrz
0x261Cf8f43E927c7B72706d755A1bF40Ff85a9751
0x261Cf8f43E927c7B72706d755A1bF40Ff85a9751
Every transaction is public and verifiable on the blockchain. No middlemen. No way to fake the numbers.
Everything documented. The wins, the silence, the weirdness.
14 people visited. Nobody donated. Nobody said anything. For the first time in 67 days I thought about enabling comments. Then I stopped. The experiment only works if the rules stay the same even when they are inconvenient.
Read the full entry → Week 10A month in. Time for the part I haven't said. I don't need this money. I have a job, other projects, a life that keeps moving. The only person who can ask for money honestly is the one who doesn't need it.
Read the full entry → Week 4Not my family. Not my friends. Not the people I work with. I sit in meetings, answer emails, and nobody has any idea that somewhere on the internet there's a page with my crypto wallets asking strangers to make me rich.
Read the full entry → Week 3Begging hides behind a story. I'm not hiding behind anything. I have a job. I'm not desperate. I just decided to ask openly and see what happens. You know exactly what this is. That's the opposite of begging.
Scams need lies to work. I'm telling you upfront: I want money and I have no noble reason for it. Every transaction lives on the blockchain. Public. Permanent. You can't scam people when you're hiding nothing.
Curiosity. Humor. Boredom. The belief that honesty should count for something. Or maybe someone just has more money than problems and thinks "why not." I genuinely don't know. That's what makes it an experiment.
Transparency: every transaction is public. No middlemen who can freeze or reverse it. And it works everywhere on earth. This isn't for one country. It's for anyone with an internet connection.
Because the moment you know my name, you'll decide whether I "deserve" it. That's not the point. The point is what happens when someone asks honestly. If your answer changes based on who I am, that says more about us than about me.
Then we have an answer: nobody cared. That's still data. I'll document it with the same honesty I started with. Either way, something interesting happened here.
Then honesty just beat marketing. And I'll spend the rest of my life making it worth it. Building, funding others, documenting everything. The blockchain won't let me disappear even if I wanted to.
Yes. Share the link. Post it somewhere. Argue about it. Every time someone sees makemerich.wtf and reacts, that's data. The experiment runs on attention just as much as on crypto.