In a space where follower counts can be bought for the price of a coffee, one platform is trying to measure something harder to fake: actual influence. Zacxbt, a crypto content creator with roughly 52,000 followers on X, just landed in the top 0.23% of Kaito’s mindshare leaderboard, a ranking that tracks who’s genuinely shaping crypto conversations rather than who’s shouting the loudest.
The ranking comes with 1,551 “smart followers,” Kaito’s term for followers who themselves carry meaningful weight in the ecosystem. Think of it as the difference between having a million random Instagram followers and having 1,500 venture capitalists reading your tweets over breakfast.
What Kaito’s mindshare model actually measures
Kaito AI operates as a kind of crypto influence barometer, but one that deliberately ignores the metrics most people obsess over. Raw follower counts don’t matter much here. Instead, the platform’s algorithm prioritizes meaningful conversations, authentic engagement, and the quality of interactions a given account generates on X.
The system assigns rankings based on conversational impact. Zacxbt’s historical peak rank was #932, and the current top 0.23% placement represents a significant climb from that previous high-water mark.
Zacxbt’s content focus spans Bitcoin, decentralized science (DeSci), AI, design, and music. That breadth across multiple trending verticals likely contributes to the engagement diversity that Kaito’s model rewards.
Kaito’s evolving algorithm and partnerships
On June 17, 2025, Kaito rolled out an algorithm update that limited weekly tweet counts and restricted points for low-insight posts. In English: posting 50 times a day about nothing stopped being a viable strategy for climbing the leaderboard.
The platform has also been building out its commercial ecosystem. In July 2025, Kaito partnered with Polygon, offering $30K USDC in monthly rewards tied to leaderboard performance. That partnership turned what was previously a bragging-rights metric into something with tangible financial upside.
By November 2025, Kaito’s leaderboards had been incorporated into the Crypto Content Creator Campus event, further embedding the platform’s metrics into the industry’s institutional fabric.
The $KAITO token, which underpins the platform’s operations, has had its own turbulent journey. Changes to X’s content-sharing policies in early 2026 impacted what Kaito calls its “Yaps” program, a feature that rewards engagement. Those policy shifts introduced volatility into the token’s price.
Why this matters for crypto investors
The Polygon partnership is worth watching closely. When ecosystems start allocating real capital, $30K USDC monthly in this case, based on influence metrics, it creates a new economic layer around content creation.
Kaito’s dependence on X as its primary data source means it inherits all of X’s policy volatility. The early 2026 policy changes that rattled the $KAITO token demonstrate this vulnerability clearly. The stabilization period following X’s policy changes suggests the market has largely digested that shock.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

1 hour ago
17









English (US) ·