Onchain reputation is one of those concepts that sounds straightforward until you try to explain why a wallet's transaction history should determine what rewards, airdrops, or gated experiences a person can access. Nomis has been building exactly that infrastructure — a scoring protocol that reads your blockchain activity and translates it into a "Reputation Score" used by partner projects to filter real users from bots and reward genuine participants.
The channel's recent posts paint a clear picture of how the product actually works in practice. Score holders get exclusive access through a marketplace called ScoreFront, where partners offer tangible incentives tied to score thresholds. GoMining handed out free Bitcoin mining NFTs to Linea Score holders with scores above 70, with the best miners going to wallets scoring 90 and above. Mercle distributed free tokens exclusively to holders of a Multichain Score — though, notably, the offer required a face scan, which is either a clever proof-of-humanity gate or a significant privacy ask depending on your perspective.
Partnership announcements dominate the feed, arriving roughly once or twice a week. The list spans a wide range of Web3 verticals: PundiAI (an NVIDIA Inception member focused on AI economy), CreatorX (a SocialFi platform on Base), Elderglade (GameFi), Manadia (backed by OKX Ventures), and Astra Nova (AI-powered entertainment with 500K users). Most of these partnerships are brokered through something called Nomis Hub, a community-driven partner program where members earn USDT payouts for connecting Nomis with new projects. It's an interesting growth mechanic — essentially crowdsourcing business development.
The tone of the channel is casual and occasionally playful, with lines like "just for fun, dude" appearing in campaign announcements. That informality works for the crypto-native audience, though it can blur the line between genuine utility and airdrop farming bait. The post about people going to extreme lengths to earn $33 — with no further context in the snippet — is a good example of content that teases without delivering substance.
With nearly 1.94 million subscribers, Nomis has built a massive audience, which makes sense given its roots in Galxe-style on-chain campaigns that were enormously popular during the last bull cycle. The channel references those days explicitly, framing a new Concero campaign as a return to its origins. That nostalgia play is smart, but it also raises a question: how much of that subscriber count reflects genuine interest versus airdrop hunters who followed for one campaign and never left.
What Nomis does well is create a coherent ecosystem where the score has actual utility — gated rewards, partner integrations, tiered access — rather than being a vanity metric. What's less clear from the channel alone is how the scoring algorithm works, what prevents gaming, and whether the protocol has meaningful traction beyond the airdrop economy.
This channel is worth following for anyone active in Web3 campaigns, TON ecosystem projects, or identity and reputation infrastructure. Casual observers will find the partnership announcements repetitive. But for degens hunting legitimate gated opportunities tied to wallet history, Nomis delivers a steady stream of concrete offers.