Crypto moves fast, and most of what gets written about it is trying to sell you something. Token projects talk their own book. Influencers chase the next pump. Even the big outlets lean on jargon that leaves a first-time reader more confused than when they started.
whale.day started from a simple frustration: there was nowhere to send a friend who asked a plain question, like “is Coinbase safe?” or “why did Bitcoin drop today?”, and trust they would get a straight, honest answer.
So we built one. We cover the day’s crypto news in plain English, write step-by-step guides for people setting up their first wallet, and compare the exchanges and tools you are actually deciding between.
What we stand for
- Plain language. If a curious beginner could not follow it, we rewrite it.
- Sourced and dated. Prices, fees, and figures carry a source and an as-of date, because crypto numbers change by the hour.
- No hype, no shilling. We will tell you when something is not worth your money, and who should skip it.
- Affiliate honesty. Some links earn us a commission. We label them, and they never change our pick.
Who writes this
whale.day is written by a small editorial desk that has followed crypto since the early cycles. We publish under pen names, but every piece is written and reviewed by a person before it goes live.
How we make money
Some of our comparison and review pages include affiliate links. If you sign up through one, we may earn a commission, at no extra cost to you. That revenue keeps the site free and independent. It buys us nothing but the time to keep writing; it does not buy a better review.
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