Pompa Beslemeli Makale
Fund Me Pages Add A Public Onchain Fundraising Layer To CryptMeUp
Yayınlandı: 2026-03-16 12:00
Fund Me Pages bring public onchain fundraising to CryptMeUp with verified owners, manual review, linked transactions, and chain-based progress visibility.
Fund Me Pages are now part of the public payment surface
CryptMeUp now supports public Fund Me Pages built on top of the same transaction infrastructure that already powers checkout links, Permanent QR flows, and payment tracking.
The point is not to imitate a charity marketplace with vague promises. The point is to let verified users publish a clean fundraising page with a clear goal, a linked onchain payment route, and a public-facing story that stays simple enough to inspect.
Why this matters product-wise
Fundraising looks easy until the product starts mixing too many responsibilities together. A page should be easy to understand, easy to share, and honest about what it does.
That is why the Fund Me layer is intentionally narrow. One page. One linked transaction. One fiat goal. Public progress. Onchain contributions. No fake complexity added just to make the feature feel larger than it is.
Built on the same transaction model
Under the hood, every Fund Me Page is backed by a linked transaction with open amount enabled. That means supporters do not need the campaign owner to predefine every exact contribution amount in advance.
A supporter opens the contribution flow, enters the amount they want to send, chooses their chain and asset, and pays onchain. That keeps the model flexible without changing the payment fundamentals.
Why verified-only matters here
Public fundraising is one of those features where a platform can become embarrassing very quickly if it pretends trust will handle itself.
That is why Fund Me Pages are not open to random anonymous publishing. They are tied to verified users, and public visibility sits behind manual review. That does not make every campaign morally perfect, but it does create a much cleaner baseline than letting every new account instantly launch a public money page.
Manual review is visible by design
A Fund Me Page that is still waiting for review no longer disappears into a generic dead end. The public page can exist while still making it clear that contributions are not yet active.
If a page is denied, the owner can see that too, together with the reason. That matters because moderation should not behave like a black box if the platform wants people to take the process seriously.
The public page is intentionally simple
The public Fund Me design is dark, minimal, and direct. It shows the title, the story, the goal, the amount raised, and the public progress. If the page is approved, the contribution route becomes available. If it is not approved, the page communicates that status clearly and disables the fundraising action.
That is the right tradeoff. Public pages should explain themselves in seconds, not drag people into a maze of interface decisions.
Chain Race turns payment data into public momentum
One of the more interesting additions is the Chain Race section. Once a Fund Me Page is approved and receives contributions, the page can show which chains are actually driving the fundraising.
That means people can see chain share, number of payments per chain, and total paid value per chain in fiat terms. It is a better fit than vague engagement counters because it reflects actual contribution behavior, not performative noise.
What this unlocks in practice
This makes Fund Me Pages useful for community drives, creator support, event funding, side-project backing, and niche campaigns where direct crypto contributions are a better fit than traditional payment rails.
It also gives merchants and project teams a public-facing entry point that sits naturally beside checkout tools instead of outside them. That matters because fundraising should not need a completely separate trust model if the infrastructure underneath is already solid.
Moderation and ownership still matter
The owner overview now makes the moderation state explicit, including denial reasons. Admin review actions are tighter and cleaner. Approval and denial also trigger mail notifications so the status change reaches the owner directly.
Those details matter more than people admit. A feature like this becomes usable when the control flow around it is clear, not just when the public card looks nice.
This is not the final shape, but it is the right first public shape
The first real version of Fund Me Pages should not try to be everything at once. It should prove that public fundraising on top of CryptMeUp can stay structured, reviewable, and operationally honest.
That is what this release is about. A verified owner can create a page, the page can be screened, the public version can show real payment progress, and supporters can contribute onchain through the linked transaction flow. That is enough to make the feature real, useful, and worth iterating on.