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Wadoozie Kicks Off 48-State US Tour for On-Chain Attention Network

Wadoozie Kicks Off 48-State US Tour for On-Chain Attention Network

Wadoozie, a narrative-driven attention network built on Ethereum, has launched a real-world tour spanning 48 U.S. states. The project is hiding 336 physical Signal Fragments across the country, alongside 240 in an online pool, that can be redeemed for the platform's native ERC-20 token, $WADZ. The tour is part of a broader push to blend on-chain engagement with offline discovery — a bet that physical hunts can drive adoption.

The scavenger hunt

Of the 576 total Signal Fragments, the majority — 336 — are stashed in locations across all 48 contiguous states. The remaining 240 sit in a separate online pool, accessible through Wadoozie's platform. Anyone who finds a fragment can redeem it for $WADZ tokens. The project hasn't released a full map of hiding spots, but it's sharing clues through its official channels as the tour progresses.

How $WADZ fits in

$WADZ is the utility token that powers Wadoozie's ecosystem. Users need it to interact with the network's narrative content, unlock features, and redeem fragments. The token is an ERC-20 on Ethereum, meaning it's compatible with most wallets and decentralized exchanges. The project hasn't disclosed the total supply or current token distribution, but the tour is clearly meant to drive both awareness and on-chain activity.

Paying creators

Wadoozie is also rolling out a Publishers Network that sets aside 7% of the total token supply to directly compensate content creators. That allocation is designed to reward people who produce narrative-driven material on the platform — a move that mirrors some of the decentralized content models seen elsewhere in crypto. The percentage is fixed at launch, but the team hasn't said whether it will adjust over time.

The tour is live now, with fragments being placed as the team moves state to state. No timeline has been given for how long the hunt will run, but the online pool remains open indefinitely. For now, Wadoozie's biggest challenge is proving that a physical treasure hunt can sustain interest long enough to build a real user base — not just a spike in token speculation.