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Publishers Center

What Is the Publishers Center

The Publishers Center is the creator hub inside the Wadoozie ecosystem. It gives people a clear place to help spread the signal — instead of posting into the void, publishers use a dedicated system to submit content, track progress, and earn rewards.

The Publishers Center includes a creator profile, clip submission, status tracking, reward history, leaderboard ranking, and missions and challenges. It's where community publishing becomes organized, visible, and worth returning to. It's a core part of the system, not an extra feature.

Why Publishers Matter

Publishers matter because Wadoozie can't scale through one account alone.

Wadoozie creates the moments, but the network only grows if those moments travel. Publishers make that happen by clipping, posting, remixing, and sharing the signal across platforms. The community distributes the signal, and that work is paid for through a dedicated 7% of supply — 70,000,000 $WADZ reserved specifically for creators.

This matters for three reasons.

One account isn't enough. No single channel can carry the full mission on its own. The mission scales when a network of creators carries it.

The community spreads the signal. The network grows when many people move the content outward. Reach is distributed, not centralized.

Creators get paid. Wadoozie is built to reward creators for real work. They aren't treated as free promotion. The Publisher Rewards pool is the largest direct-payout allocation in the entire tokenomics.

How to Create a Profile

Getting started as a publisher should feel simple.

  1. Connect your wallet. Start by connecting a supported wallet. This gives you access to the creator side of the platform.
  2. Set up your profile. Create your publisher profile with the details the platform asks for. This is where your submissions, rewards, and ranking live.
  3. Learn the dashboard. Once your profile is ready, open your dashboard and look around. A good dashboard helps you quickly see your submitted clips, current status, past rewards, leaderboard position, and live challenges or missions. The goal is to make your next action clear from the start.

How Clip Submission Works

Clip submission is the main action inside the Publishers Center. Publishers take content from the Wadoozie mission and turn it into clips that help spread the signal.

What content qualifies. Strong submissions usually come from livestream moments, activations, fragment recoveries, lore moments, recap content, or strong remixes built around the mission. Anything pulled from streams, activations, fragment recoveries, lore moments, or original remix work is fair game.

How to submit. A standard flow looks like this — choose your clip, upload or link it, add the needed info, and submit for review.

Accepted formats. The platform defines exact technical rules, but in general strong formats include short-form vertical clips, clean edits, remix-friendly formats, and social-ready cuts.

What strong submissions look like. A strong clip focuses on a clear moment, feels easy to watch quickly, fits the mission tone, and helps the signal travel. Good clips are simple, sharp, and easy to share.

Review and Approval Process

Every submission moves through a clear review process. Publishers should be able to track where every submission is in review, what it earned, and how it ranks.

A simple review flow looks like this.

  • Submitted — Your clip is in the system and waiting for review.
  • In Review — The team checks quality, fit, and policy alignment.
  • Approved — Your clip qualifies for rewards and performance tracking.
  • Rejected — Your clip doesn't qualify in its current form.

Status updates. Publishers should be able to see status clearly at any time. Good status labels remove confusion and make the system feel fair.

Timing expectations. Review should feel fast and predictable. Publishers should know whether a decision usually takes a short time, a standard review window, or longer during major campaigns. Clear timing builds trust.

Reward Tracking

Reward tracking helps publishers see what their work is doing.

Submission history. What you submitted, when you submitted it, and what status it has now.

Reward history. What earned rewards, how much was earned, and when rewards were added.

Payout logic. Publishers should understand why a clip earned what it did. Clear logic helps people improve over time.

Performance indicators. Useful performance signals include approved submissions, top-performing clips, engagement results, challenge bonuses, and ranking changes.

The goal is simple. Make contribution visible.

Leaderboards

Leaderboards turn publishing into a live competition. They help publishers see how they compare with others and give people a reason to keep improving.

How ranking works. A leaderboard can rank publishers based on approved submissions, reward totals, challenge performance, campaign results, and consistency over time.

What affects standing. Your standing changes based on clip quality, frequency of approved clips, campaign participation, challenge completion, and reward activity.

Seasonal or campaign-based resets. Rankings can reset by season, campaign, or event cycle. This keeps the system fresh and gives newer publishers a chance to compete.

Missions and Challenges

Missions and challenges give publishers extra ways to earn and compete. These can include multipliers, prize pools, and seasonal bounties on top of base rewards.

Challenge structure. A challenge can focus on one type of content, one campaign, one route moment, one active node, or one mission theme.

Multipliers. Some challenges increase reward value when a clip matches a specific goal or campaign.

Bounty pools. A challenge may include a shared pool of rewards that top publishers can win.

Campaign-specific tasks. Tasks change based on what the mission is doing right now — clip the latest activation, remix a fragment moment, highlight a current node, or create a recap for a live route update. This keeps publishing tied to the real movement of the network.

Publisher Best Practices

Good publishers do more than upload clips. They help the signal travel well.

What performs well. Strong content usually has a clear moment, quick pacing, good timing, strong visual focus, and mission relevance.

How to clip effectively. Cut to the strongest moment fast. Keep the clip easy to follow. Make it feel native to short-form platforms. Highlight action, emotion, or signal.

Brand-safe content. Stay away from content that feels misleading, harmful, off-brand, low-quality, or unrelated to the mission.

Stay aligned with mission tone. Wadoozie has a clear tone — energetic, participatory, story-driven, and system-aware. Good clips should feel like part of the mission, not random internet noise.