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Why ring action and pro wrestling?

SETUP PRO body slam with SatoshiOs

Why professional wrestling?
SatoshiO’s aspires to be a professional brand.

Martial arts and ring action are important part of Bitcoin custody.

Wrestling occurs in a ring – and we initially thought that the ring was circular, aligning with our brand.

Pro Wrestling is better known than Bitcoin.
There are more people who know about pro wresting than Bitcoin. More people understand the level of predetermination in the ring than they understand the predetermination of monetary value – whether that is the downside of inflation or the upside of proof of work.

Why in Thailand?

They have a very creative culture. Thai advertisements are known globally for being funny. Which is rare. Comedy and romance usually do not translate well to other cultures. Action films get larger budgets to go internationally, because action is universally recognized by human instinct.

With low electricity rates in Thailand, the opportunity to mine Bitcoin is available to expand and strengthen the local energy networks.

With a very open culture, Thailand can be seen as prime for Bitcoin adoption. Thailand has a regulatory framework supporting Bitcoin.

To push the universal adoption of bitcoin, we have to push the edge cases of testing the usability at a human interface level by juxtaposing the Bitcoin symbol ₿ (BTC) in a global context where the Thai Bhat symbol ฿ (THB) is also displayed.

As ForEx is anticipated to be action packed for the next few years (and already is in international contexts), our roadmap is clear.

Lastly, Thailand is the only south East Asian country to never be colonized by a European country. Their fighting spirit is a great place for pro wrestling and Bitcoin to grow.

Why pro wrestling and not striking? Thailand has great Muay Thai and professional boxers. Because pro wrestling can be seen as a simulation. Boxing is also a simulation. While we might remember Alan Minter as saying “Sure there have been injuries and deaths in boxing – but none of them serious.” Professional Japanese boxers, Shigetoshi Kotari and Hiromasa Urakaw recently passed away from the traumatic brain injuries they suffered on the same undercard.

Side note, a pro boxer just told me that the lighter weight classes get more TBIs. Because heavy weights would clean KO each other, while the lighter weight classes take more repeated blows to the head, while not being able to cut the lights off on their opponents. A similar counter argument could be made that heavier weights get more TBI from stronger impacts. Pulling the statistics on deaths per weight class appears to show a bellcurve from Super Bantamweight (122lb) to Middleweight (160lb). While that might appear to be a bellcurve representative around average healthier weight, it is % of death rate based upon the number of bouts per weightless. This clearly supports the theory that lighter weight classes sustain more deaths from TBI. Stats are easy to pull.

Why Japanese pro wrestling? “Satoshi” is Japanese.

Asking why multiple times is a classical tool used in design thinking as well as a technique employed by token producer and GPU advocate Sam Altman to illuminate why a decision is both thoughtful and strategic.
Last year a Bitcoin based cereal brand appeared silly. This year it is recognized as strategic. And Bitcoin treasuries with sound monetary balance sheets are all of a sudden the rage.

And in summary, many of the matches end with knee-bars and heel hooks – why ignore 50% of the mempool? Some might even end with dirty ninjitsu tricks using what might appear to be a fist full of wheat chaff in the opponents face, but is in fact 目潰し(metsubushi) or blinding powder. 🤔

Image courtesy @maikleangelo on instagram at SETUP PRO.