
Guest: Hong Kong Wang Fugui, leading Web3 KOL in Hong Kong
Host: yuanyuan, BitMart Marketing VP
In many people's impressions, Hong Kong Wang Fugui is a Web3 KOL with hundreds of thousands of followers, and he is also the one who once challenged "to survive for seven days using only digital currency" in Hong Kong with Dog Brother. But defining him solely as a "blogger" is clearly insufficient.
He has been a voice actor for TVB, recording a large amount of dubbing content for brands like DJI; before coming to Hong Kong, he was a food blogger with over 400 exploration videos. Now, he has become a content creator active in the Web3 community, RWA track, and personal IP field.
These seemingly unrelated identities actually share a common point in his view: continuously exploring new possibilities.
This episode mainly discusses: the changes in the Web3 ecosystem in Hong Kong over the past three years, whether stablecoins and RWA will really change future finance, and what opportunities ordinary people can seize during this cycle.

From Voice Actor to Web3 KOL, Life Has No Standard Answers
Wang Fugui does not like others to label him. He feels that a person is inherently complex. One can be a voice actor today, a content creator tomorrow, and in the future, he does not rule out starting his own business.
In the past few years, he has maintained a "slash-type lifestyle": doing voice acting during the day, and operating his Twitter account, studying projects, and participating in community activities in his spare time. Compared to receiving a fixed salary from a company, he enjoys the freshness brought by constantly trying different identities.
In his view, one of the greatest charms of Web3 is that it allows everyone to find their own place.
A "Digital Currency Survival Challenge" That Let Him See the True Changes in the Industry
If there is any experience that truly made more people recognize Hong Kong Wang Fugui, it must be the "Seven Days Digital Currency Survival Challenge" he launched with Dog Brother.
Three years ago, with a budget of $2000, they attempted to use only cryptocurrency for consumption in Hong Kong within seven days. On the first night, they could not find accommodation that accepted crypto payments, so they had to sit in McDonald's all night; to have a meal, they needed to ask each merchant one by one if they accepted Bitcoin; for transportation, they could only rely on drivers willing to accept digital currency. They asked over 200 offline merchants, most of whom gave a negative answer.
But in just three years, the situation has changed significantly. More and more restaurants in Hong Kong are starting to accept stablecoin payments, and some merchants have even collaborated with relevant RWA projects, preparing for application scenarios after the future implementation of Hong Kong’s stablecoin regulatory framework.
In his view, the real landing of Web3 is not about price fluctuations, but one day when people can use stablecoins for payments as naturally as swiping a bank card.
What Stablecoins Really Solve Is Not Payment, But Global Financial Efficiency
Regarding the recently hottest RWA (Real World Assets) track, Wang Fugui stated that stablecoins themselves are currently the biggest success story of RWA. He believes that the so-called asset tokenization is not merely moving houses, stocks, or bonds onto the blockchain, but rather reconstructing the efficiency of asset circulation through blockchain technology.
Tokenization of U.S. stocks, on-chain bonds, digitalization of real estate, essentially allows global capital to flow faster and at a lower cost.
However, he also reminds everyone that the current RWA is still in a stage where regulation is gradually maturing. Many projects still face issues regarding asset authenticity, custody transparency, and legal frameworks. Before regulation is fully matured, ordinary investors should focus more on the assets themselves, rather than being attracted solely by the term "on-chain."
Information Gaps Have Not Disappeared, They Have Just Transformed into Cognitive Gaps
Many people believe that with institutional entry, the information gap in the crypto industry is disappearing. Wang Fugui does not completely agree. He feels that the real information gap is slowly evolving into a cognitive gap. The same news can yield completely different conclusions to people from different backgrounds and life experiences. Even in the highly open information environment of Hong Kong, the ways in which individuals access and digest information still vary greatly. And there is no shortcut to closing this gap. It requires continuous learning, repeatedly facing setbacks, and ongoing practice.
He admits that when he first entered the crypto space, he also experienced countless "hits to the south wall." Having 100x leverage positions liquidated, buying private placements on a whim, chasing trending NFTs, missing profit-taking opportunities... These experiences ultimately made him realize that finding an investment method suitable for oneself is more important than how much money one can make.
If one does not have the ability to research on-chain projects, then it is better not to participate blindly; if one is more suited for long-term holding, then focus on mainstream assets. Understanding oneself is more crucial than chasing trends.
The Real Opportunity for Ordinary People May Not Be Stablecoin Licenses
When discussing future opportunities, he particularly mentions that many people focus on grand narratives like stablecoin licenses and RWA infrastructure, but for ordinary people, that may not truly represent their own opportunities.
In contrast, he is more interested in predictive markets, personal IP, and various new professions arising around the new Web3 ecosystem. For instance, he is very optimistic about the development of predictive markets.
As global large-scale predictive platforms continue to grow, he believes this could become an important new track in the future, and the communities, content, and research formed around predictive markets also present numerous opportunities. As for investment itself, his advice is quite simple: if you do not have sufficient research ability, a small investment in mainstream coins is enough.
In the IP Era, Everyone Should Become Their Own Media
In addition to growth and entrepreneurship, Wang Fugui has been persistently engaging in another thing over the years: managing his own content brand. From being an exploration blogger to a voice actor to a Web3 KOL, he firmly believes that personal IP will become an increasingly important asset in the future. Because many opportunities are not recognized by others after they know you, but because they have seen your content over time that they are willing to get to know you.
He has also observed that more and more outstanding individuals are entering Web3 but do not know how to express themselves. The skills are not lacking; what is lacking is continuous output. For newcomers who want to enter the industry, he gives very straightforward advice: definitely make Twitter, definitely develop personal IP. If you do not know how to do it, observe how others are doing it, and just start doing it.
In an era where information is becoming increasingly fragmented and attention is becoming scarce, continuous expression itself is a form of long-term compounding. And for ordinary people, perhaps the next real opportunity that will not go out of style is not a particular coin, nor a specific trend, but rather establishing a self that deserves long-term attention and trust from others.
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