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Missions & Participation

Participation Overview

Wadoozie is built around participation.

The goal isn't to keep people on the outside just watching. The goal is to help people move from awareness into action, and from action into deeper involvement. That's what makes this ecosystem different.

Instead of watching from a distance, following random moments, or staying passive, Wadoozie invites people to follow the mission, join activations, recover fragments, publish content, and take part in the network directly.

Participation over spectatorship. Watching matters, but it's only the beginning. The network grows when people do more than observe.

Movement from awareness to contribution. A person may first notice Wadoozie through a clip, a stream, or the tracker. Over time, that same person can become a holder, a publisher, or a participant.

Why action matters. Action makes the system real. It activates nodes, spreads the signal, grows the mission, and moves the network forward.

Watchers

A watcher is the entry point into the ecosystem. Most people begin here, discovering Wadoozie through livestream moments, short-form clips, recap content, the Bus Tracker, and the public map.

What watchers do first. Watchers usually follow the stream, open the tracker, explore the map, learn the story, and watch current activations. Everyone starts here.

How watchers move deeper. As watchers spend more time with the mission, they start asking bigger questions. How does the network work? What is $WADZ? How do fragments work? How can I join? That's how many watchers become holders, publishers, or participants.

Holders

A holder takes a deeper step into the ecosystem. Holding means more than watching a chart — in the Wadoozie system, a holder chooses to align with the long-term growth of the network.

What it means to hold. A holder gets $WADZ, stays close to the mission, follows network growth over time, and takes part in the ecosystem at a deeper level.

Why holders matter. Holders form the committed base of the network. They're more likely to follow activations, watch progress across nodes, join future opportunities, and stay involved as the ecosystem grows.

How holders connect to future access. Holding connects to deeper participation, special drops, future perks, gated missions, and stronger access across the ecosystem. Holding is one way to move from interest into alignment.

Publishers

Publishers are the people who help move the signal. They take moments from the mission and spread them across platforms by clipping, posting, remixing, and competing.

Creators as signal distributors. Wadoozie creates the moments, but publishers help those moments travel.

Publishers as growth engine. The ecosystem can't scale through one account alone. Publishers help the network reach more people, which helps the signal spread further.

Publishing as meaningful participation. Publishing isn't extra activity on the side. It's one of the core engines of growth in the Wadoozie system. Through the Publishers Center, creators can create a profile, submit clips, track status, view rewards, join challenges, and climb leaderboards. The work is paid through the dedicated 7% Publisher Rewards pool — 70,000,000 $WADZ reserved specifically for creators.

This makes publishing a real part of the network, not an informal side activity.

Participants

A participant steps into the mission directly. Participants do more than watch or publish. They enter the story itself.

Showing up at nodes. Participants may go to active states or events where the mission is happening in public.

Fragment recovery. Participants follow clues, recover Signal Fragments, and help move nodes forward.

Entering the story itself. This is the deepest form of involvement. A participant helps turn online momentum into real-world energy. Participants make the network feel alive because they help prove the mission is happening in the world, not only on a screen.

Role Progression

People don't have to stay in one role forever. Wadoozie is built so people can move deeper over time.

A common path looks like this.

Watcher → Holder. Someone first follows the mission, then decides to align more deeply by getting $WADZ.

Holder → Publisher. A holder may decide to start creating and sharing content, helping spread the signal.

Publisher → Participant. A publisher may go even further by joining a live node, following clues, or showing up during activations.

Nonlinear paths are okay. Not everyone moves in the same order. Some people stay watchers for a long time. Some become publishers before holders. Some join a node before publishing anything. The system supports different paths while still showing the next step clearly.

How to Join a Mission

Joining a mission should feel simple.

  1. Follow the route. Start by checking where Wadoozie is and where the mission is moving.
  2. Check the active node. Look at the current active state or node to understand where the system is focused now.
  3. Watch for clues. Clues may appear through the stream, the map, node pages, social posts, or community activity.
  4. Take action. Your action may include joining a mission, publishing a clip, recovering a fragment, taking part in a challenge, or showing up at a live activation.

The best first step is always the one that helps you move from watching into doing.

Online Participation Paths

Not everyone can join in person. That's why Wadoozie includes online participation paths.

Digital fragments. Some fragments live in the online pool and can be reached through digital activity. Of the 576 total Signal Fragments, 240 live in the online pool — released primarily through daily blog posts on wadoozie.com.

Community missions. The platform runs online missions that reward people for specific types of action.

Publishing. Clipping, posting, remixing, and sharing content are strong ways to take part remotely.

Social actions. People can also join through campaign activity, social engagement, community tasks, and mission-related actions online.

Online participation keeps the network open to more people.

Real-World Participation Paths

Wadoozie isn't only digital. Real-world participation is a core part of the mission.

Active state visits. When a state becomes active, people may be able to join the mission in person. Each state's seven Signal Fragments enter the field during activation.

Event participation. Some moments happen through live events, activations, or public appearances.

Node-level actions. Users may take part at the node level through clue following, fragment recovery, local participation, event attendance, and direct mission support.

Real-world participation connects the story to physical places and lived experience.

Community Challenges

Community challenges help organize action across the network. They give people a clear reason to join, compete, or work together.

Challenge structure. A challenge can be based on a live activation, a node, a fragment event, a campaign, a publishing goal, or a mission milestone.

Reward rules. Good challenge rules make clear what action qualifies, how rewards work, when the challenge starts, when it ends, and how winners or outcomes get confirmed.

Collaboration vs competition. Some challenges work best when people compete. Others work best when people work together. A healthy system uses both — competition for leaderboards, rank, and top rewards; collaboration for community goals, shared activations, and network-wide progress.

Challenges help keep participation active, visible, and exciting.