Every day, millions of brilliant thoughts are born in showers, on commutes, at 3 AM when the ceiling becomes a screen. Most of them die in a notes app. Some get 12 likes on Twitter and disappear. None of them get what they deserve — a price.
Mindmart changes that.
Post a thought. Any thought. A shower observation. A stolen piece of wisdom. An existential crisis wrapped in 280 characters. The moment you post it, it enters the market.
Other users read your thought and decide: is this worth investing in? If they believe in it, they invest neurons — Mindmart's fictional currency. The more people invest, the higher the price climbs. You earn a 3% commission when someone sells.
Your thought now has a market value. Not because an algorithm decided it was worthy. Because real people put their conviction behind it.
You start with 1,000 neurons. Post up to 3 thoughts a day. Any shower thought, hot take, existential crisis, or stolen wisdom. 280 characters max.
Other users browse the feed and invest neurons in thoughts they believe will resonate. The more people invest, the higher the price climbs. You earn a 3% commission when someone sells their share.
Buy thoughts you believe in early. Watch them rise as more people discover them. Sell before the hype cools. Your portfolio tracks every move.
The best traders and the best authors both earn. Post brilliant thoughts and earn commissions. Make smart trades and grow your portfolio. Your P&L tells the story.
Neurons (◈) are Mindmart's fictional in-platform currency. They have zero real-world monetary value. You cannot buy, sell, redeem, or convert neurons into real money, cryptocurrency, or anything else. They exist purely for the game — to see if your taste in ideas is better than everyone else's.
Mindmart was built in India by a small team that believes the internet undervalues original thinking. We believe that a well-crafted thought is worth more than a like. That conviction matters more than attention. And that the best ideas in the world are sitting in someone's head right now, unspoken, because no platform ever told them their thoughts had value.
Until now.