Is Kaspa Finally Breaking Out Above 4 Cents?

Hey, welcome to Kaspa Daily Pulse – here’s what the Kaspa community’s been buzzing about today.
First up, price chat finally had some life. People were calling out a sharp move up, with a lot of focus on Kaspa pushing toward four cents. The key zone everyone kept circling was roughly three point eight to four point two cents, with one trader saying they’d feel better above four point three cents, while another called four point four cents the “fucker” resistance before a possible move toward five or six cents.
The bigger vibe? Hope is back… cautiously. After nearly six months below four cents, people were saying the community needs “a few weeks of joy” after months of pain. But there was still plenty of trauma in the room. Some think the bottom may be in, others still expect more pain, and one person joked that if even the biggest degens are thinking about cutting losses, maybe capitulation has finally capitulated.
Second, the new Kaspa website got some attention. The reaction was mostly positive, especially around onboarding. People liked that it now pushes simple actions like getting a wallet and buying a small amount of Kaspa. That sounds basic, but the community saw it as important: make the first step easier, make Kaspa feel less like something from the nineties, and help new users actually get started.
Third, there was a serious thread about what Kaspa still needs next. The repeated theme was: retail has done a lot already, but now the project needs institutions, builders, centralized exchanges, and real use cases. One person said Silverscript programming could let app builders get to work, and another argued that stronger developer adoption could help Kaspa’s software ecosystem grow. The idea was clear: price excitement is nice, but lasting demand needs builders.
Fourth, mining came up in detail. One miner said they’re getting around twenty-seven to twenty-eight KAS per day from a KS7 Lite, running about five hundred watts, but admitted they’re mining at a loss after electricity. The reason wasn’t just profit, though. They mentioned supporting the network, running their own node, having a public node and bridge, and letting others mine to their node for free. That’s very Kaspa-community-coded.
And finally, a practical warning: people reminded each other that open source trading tools are not automatically safe. Just because something is on GitHub doesn’t mean it’s malware-free.
That’s it for today’s pulse. Let’s see what tomorrow brings. Catch you then.