Tokenization and AI as Tools for SMEs: A Vision of Nexus and Onyx Partnership
We’re proud to announce a partnership with Onyx to bring tokenization tooling for revenue-generating businesses to the Nexus ecosystem.
Welcome to the Ambassador Spotlight series, where we will chat with Nexus Ambassadors from around the world to learn more about them and what brought them to the Nexus community.
What is a Nexus Ambassador?
Nexus Ambassadors are highly engaged contributors who support the Nexus community. These individuals help drive the ecosystem forward through leadership, influence, and hands-on involvement.
Dee, who goes by @InfluencerDee on X, is one of the Nexus Ambassadors. Dee is located in Nigeria, which has established itself as Africa's leading hub for Web3 and blockchain adoption. We asked Dee a few questions about Nexus, the Nigerian Web3 community, and more.
What drew me to Nexus is its bold yet practical mission. I’ve always believed Web3 should unlock real innovation, not just speculation, and Nexus is building the infrastructure to make that happen. The idea of a world supercomputer, a verifiable, scalable network that powers AI, rollups, and decentralised applications, aligns with my vision of Web3 as an open, trustless, and collaborative layer for the future of the internet.
I also love that Nexus isn’t just solving one piece of the puzzle; it’s tackling computation, verifiability, and scalability in a way that empowers builders anywhere, including underrepresented regions like Africa. It’s a project with global ambition but local impact potential, and that resonates deeply with me.
Nigeria’s Web3 community is hungry for infrastructure that can help us build and scale without relying on centralised bottlenecks. We have incredible talent here: developers, creatives, entrepreneurs, but often the lack of reliable, affordable computing power and verifiable data access limits what people can create.
Nexus changes that. By decentralising compute and enabling verifiable AI, it gives Nigerian builders access to world-class resources without needing massive capital or relying on Web2 giants. Think of AI startups, DeFi protocols, or even education-focused dApps here in Nigeria; they can all benefit from a scalable, low-trust infrastructure.
It also speaks to our aspiration for sovereignty in tech. With Nexus, we’re not just consuming what’s built elsewhere; we can actively contribute and innovate on equal footing with the rest of the world.
It’s been a massive growth. A few years ago, most Nigerians in crypto were focused on trading or remittances. Now we’re seeing more developers, more founders, and more serious conversations around infrastructure and on-chain utility. Hackathons are more vibrant, meetups are packed, and new projects are coming out of Lagos, Abuja, Uyo; you name it.
Regulatory attitudes are still cautious, but the conversation is shifting from outright bans to figuring out frameworks. At the same time, grassroots communities have become much stronger. People aren’t waiting for government approval; they’re learning, building, and collaborating globally.
Also, recently, the Nigerian government signed a bill into law officially recognising digital assets, including cryptocurrencies.
Great times ahead!
Absolutely. Nigerian builders, influencers and enthusiasts are getting more recognition now than ever. We’ve seen teams join international accelerators, developers contribute to major protocols, and influencers collaborate with global Web3 projects. Partnerships with ecosystems like Base, Polygon, and now Nexus are creating more visibility for our local talent.
Personally, I focus on creating awareness, building strong local communities, and acting as a bridge. It’s about making sure the world sees Nigeria not just as a user base, but as a builder hub.
My biggest advice? Start small but stay consistent. Learn the basics of blockchain, experiment with open-source projects, and join communities where you can collaborate and grow. Also, focus on building skills and relationships.
Projects like Nexus can be a huge catalyst because they open doors to next-gen tech like verifiable AI and decentralised compute fields, where Nigerians can have a real competitive edge.
Most importantly, stay curious. Web3 is still early, and Nigerians have the drive and creativity to shape its future.
For resources, I recommend: