Bittensor Tops AI Crypto Social Rankings as LimeWire, Virtuals and Venice Share Voice
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CryptoDep’s latest snapshot of social chatter around AI-focused crypto projects makes one thing obvious: one name is stealing the limelight. Bittensor, the network at the top of the chart, isn’t just ahead, it’s in a different zip code. With 8.81K posts and a staggering 2.12 million interactions, Bittensor’s share of social conversation sits at 0.55%, comfortably the highest on the list. In plain terms, people are talking about it, and they’re doing more than just talking; they’re sharing, replying and amplifying the conversation at a scale the others haven’t matched.
That dominance matters. Social activity isn’t just vanity metrics; it’s where narratives form, communities organize, and attention gets turned into momentum. When posts about a project rack up millions of interactions, it draws eyes from influencers, traders, and journalists, and that attention can snowball quickly. Whether that ends up changing token prices or driving on-chain adoption is another question, but for now, Bittensor owns the conversation.
Tight Mid-Field Race
Behind Bittensor, the field looks a lot more clustered. LimeWire, Virtuals Protocol and Venice all show the same 0.20% social dominance, but their raw numbers tell slightly different stories. LimeWire posts number 1.82K and generates about 435K interactions; that’s a relatively high interaction-to-post ratio.
Virtuals Protocol posts 1.45K times and pulls in 89.2K interactions, while Venice logs 1.21K posts and roughly 200K interactions. So even though they take up a similar slice of the overall “share of voice,” the texture of their engagement differs. Some get fewer posts but more interactions per post, while others post more often with steadier but smaller engagement.
Further down the list, you see another pair of near-ties. Qubic registers 1.14K posts and 178K interactions with a 0.15% share of voice; Holoworld AI sits close behind with 969 posts and 93.6K interactions and the same share. That parity suggests that both projects are consistent conversation drivers within their communities, even if Qubic’s content appears to spark slightly more reactions.
PAAL AI and ASI follow with respectable footprints. PAAL AI has 954 posts and 94.2K interactions, while ASI, tagged under the FET ticker on the chart, posts 876 times and draws 186K interactions. And rounding out the top ten, Matrix AI and Flux record 764 and 653 posts respectively, with interaction counts of 62.7K and 58.6K. Flux’s social dominance is the smallest on the board at 0.05%, but it’s still in the top ten, not bad in a space that moves fast and where attention is fleeting.
The chart credits LunarCrush as the analytics source, which is worth noting because the way you measure “who’s winning” on social depends entirely on the lens you use. Social dominance counts share of voice; interactions measure intensity; post volume shows output. They’re related but not identical. A project can have fewer, highly reactive posts and therefore punch above its weight in interactions, while another may publish a steady stream of content that keeps it visible without sparking viral moments.
For anyone building or following AI crypto projects, the headline is simple. Volume helps, but what really propels a project is engagement that people care to amplify. Bittensor’s lead shows that it has both the volume and the spark right now. The mid-tier cluster suggests several projects are close on different axes, promising signs that the sector is stirring up real conversation. In crypto, being talked about loudly and often is half the battle. The rest is making the buzz translate into lasting value.
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