World Domination Begins With Getting a System in a Modern World-Chapter 132: Doing His Own Part
Chapter 132: Doing His Own Part
After James had made his decision, he and Ralph got to work.
Ralph started creating multiple wallets for James. For this plan of theirs to work perfectly, they will need to be smart and careful about it.
They can’t use one wallet to buy all the coins or make huge purchasee on them, as that would attract a lot of attention and smart trackers would all over them.
But James and Ralph intend to use their main wallets where their Vader memecoin holding are stored, to make small visible buys.
The reason for this is because they want to bait watchers — smart trackers, the whales and those that’s tracking their account, and closely watching their account.
Through the small buys they will make with their main wallets, they will pulls attention and credibility, causing whales and smart trackers who follow their wallets to assume that they found alpha and FOMO in.
Since their first project was a major success, these people would have the thought that this project would be another success.
Of course it isn’t guaranteed and those people will still do their own research but at least 50% will definitely FOMO in.
Also, by using their main wallets to make small purchases, they will generates early traction, create buzz, increase buy pressure, and helps them front-run hype.
This way, things will kick off faster for them and they will be able to achieve their goal quickly.
These people will become their set up to exit liquidity, by becoming their exit fuel once price spikes.
Yes, James and Ralph will be leaving those people with tokens not worth more than dust in their wallets. But what can he say? That’s just how the world is.
But the truth is that James won’t actually be the one to leave them with dust, it’s the Devs of this tokens. And there’s nothing he can do about that.
It took James and Ralph almost half an hour to set up more than a score of wallets, putting auto sells functions on all them, to sell when the price of the tokens, or the wallet’s profit reaches a certain percentage.
After they were done with that, James decided to fund his account.
"So, how much are you funding your wallet?" Ralph asked curiously.
"$30 million as planned," James replied.
"But it will be impossible to fund it directly without any problems," he added.
Ralph nodded in agreement when he heard what James said.
"Yeah. Any transaction above $10,000 usually triggers automatic AML (Anti-Money Laundering) reviews. And $30 million is a huge amount of money, deep into institutional territory, which means the cex will definitely demand: proof of funds, source of wealth and possibly regulatory compliance documents," he said, and continued, "If you do it all at once, your cex account could be frozen or flagged temporarily until compliance clears it."
"Also, Traditional banks won’t casually let someone wire $30M to a crypto exchange without intense scrutiny. Even deposit channels for institutional investors also have limits," he added.
James sighed when he heard this but he wasn’t worried. He wasn’t planning on deposition the whole $30 million at once, as that would be extremely stupid of him.
Since he can’t fund that huge amount of money at once into his by cex account directly. He has only two other options: to use the institutional deposit channel or to deposit the money in smaller chunks across different CEXs.
And he chose the second option, as he immediately started installing other CEXs’ apps.
The first option was easier but there’s no way for James to contact an institutional investors at the moment.
Yes, he can contact his portfolio manager for his prime brokerage account but he doesn’t want to link his trading account to whatever his little adventure.
While the installations were still in progress, James began with what he could control — funding his Bynance account. He initiated a smooth $3 million transfer, watching the confirmation screen load with practiced ease.
A few minutes later, the first of the new CEX apps finished installing. James clicked it open, quickly created an account, completed the KYC, and funded it with another $3 million — mirroring his Bynance deposit.
He didn’t pause. As soon as one was done, he launched the next.
Each platform came with its own quirks — different interfaces, verification procedures, confirmation delays — but James powered through, remaining focused and fast.
He repeated the process across all nine new centralized exchanges he installed, methodically creating verified accounts and funding each with $3 million.
$30 million in total across ten different CEXs. Each one now loaded with raw potential, neatly segmented and hidden under fresh aliases.
While he was busy managing the funding, Ralph was working his end like a machine — fine-tuning the wallets, configuring automatic sell triggers, preloading burner accounts, and managing the UI on his laptop like it was second nature.
He also messaged the select investors they’d quietly invited into the operation — whisper-level alphas, the type of people who didn’t need public shills to know where the money was moving.
Once James had completed the funding stage, Ralph looked over with a nod.
"When you’re done topping off the wallets, convert them all to USDT and send to this wallet," Ralph said, sliding his phone with QR codes of his wallets, across to James. "I’ll distribute from there and manage the buys manually. Less exposure."
James nodded and got to work. He opened each app again — one by one — and began converting the fiat balance into USDT.
He made sure to do it in smaller tranches, between $200,000 to $400,000 per transaction. Anything higher risked triggering an automated compliance flag, even on crypto-friendly exchanges.
Each transfer took time — some instantly, others lagging with authentication lags or OTP requests.
What should have taken an hour dragged into three, and by the time James finished converting and sending the USDT to Ralph’s master wallet, the sky outside had darkened into velvet night.
He let out a long breath and leaned back, eyes closed for a second. His fingers cracked audibly as he stretched them, the stiffness settling into his joints after hours of nonstop multitasking.
"You’ve done your part," Ralph said, glancing at him. "I’ll take it from here. Buy windows open tomorrow morning — I’ll be in position before the liquidity shifts."
James gave a silent nod and stood up, grabbing his laptop and slinging the bag back over his shoulder.
Just as he reached for the door, Natasha appeared, holding a tray of neatly covered plates and a soft smile on her face.
"You can’t leave without eating," she said gently. "Dinner’s ready."
James paused, his eyes on her warm expression — the kind of look that cut straight through exhaustion and made him stay.
"Alright," he said. "Make it light, though."
Natasha smiled, pleased, and walked to the kitchen. A few minutes later, the three of them were gathered at the dining table, sharing a relaxed, quiet dinner.
The food was simple but perfect — grilled chicken, steamed vegetables, and a bowl of jasmine rice. Natasha had even poured him a glass of orange juice.
As they ate, conversation floated between casual jokes and Ralph explaining how he was going to stagger the buys based on volume flow and preprogrammed sell thresholds.
When dinner ended, James pushed back from the table and stood, wiping his mouth with a napkin. frёewebηovel.cѳm
"Thanks for the meal," he said, and leaned down to press a soft kiss to Natasha’s cheek.
She blushed, a radiant smile rising to her lips.
James headed for the door, and Ralph walked him out.
Outside, the air was cool, and the night was quiet.
James turned at the car, gave Ralph a short wave.
"Let me know if anything shifts," he said.
Ralph nodded. "You’ll be the first to know."
James slid into the Lexus, the engine purring to life, and drove off