Welcome to the Crypto Olympics: the Podium Ceremony!

What an amazing Crypto Olympics it was! There were some nail-biting moments, some joyous moments, and even some tears, but we made it through at last, and we finally have our Ultimate Coin!

Today, we will be awarding the gold, silver, and bronze medals to the appropriate coins and check out how each coin is doing now that the games are over.

Gold

The gold medal is awarded to our Ultimate Coin, the coin who fought through many battles and came out on top through it all.

EOS is our crypto champion! EOS fought through four rounds, ultimately winning the finale and being crowned the Ultimate Coin.

EOS is currently selling at $8.27, putting the coin up 6.41% in the past 24 hours – in true winner’s fashion.

Silver

The silver medal goes to our runner-up coin, Ethereum (available on Coinbase). Ethereum (available on Coinbase) started out as a sTron (available on Binance)g leader but was just pipped to the post by EOS in the final round by 0.03%. Ethereum (available on Coinbase) is nothing but a graceful loser, however, and ETH congratulates EOS on a great match.

Ethereum (available on Coinbase) is currently selling at $874.24, which puts the coin up 4.88% in the past 24 hours.

Bronze

The receiver of our bronze medal is decided between the two semi-finalists that were knocked out by EOS and Ethereum (available on Coinbase) on Days 7 and 14. This comes down to Litecoin (available on Coinbase) and NEM, and whichever coin grew the most during its round…

…And the bronze medal goes to NEM! During its semi-final round, NEM grew by 1.05%, whereas Litecoin (available on Coinbase) lost 1.38% during its semi-final round against Ethereum (available on Coinbase).

NEM is currently selling for $0.400910, putting it up 4.31% in the past 24 hours.

Wrap-Up

Hopefully, the Crypto Olympics has shown you that the crypto world is unpredictable, at best. Whatever coin won in its bracket really came down to chance and luck. When trading or investing in crypto, it’s important to keep this in mind. Things can turn suddenly, and a coin that was doing well for several rounds consistently can plummet drastically only hours later. That’s why it’s important to do your research and keep your eye on the tokens you invest in, and, even more importantly, don’t invest more than you can afford to lose.

To see the breakdown of how the rounds went, check the chart below:

For a more in-depth look at each round, click on the links below:

Crypto Olympics Day 1: Tron (available on Binance) vs. Lisk

Crypto Olympics Day 2: Litecoin (available on Coinbase) vs. Monero

Crypto Olympics Day 3: Tron (available on Binance) vs. Litecoin (available on Coinbase)

Crypto Olympics Day 4: Ethereum (available on Coinbase) vs. NEO

Crypto Olympics Day 5: Ripple (available on Binance) vs. Stellar

Crypto Olympics Day 6: Ethereum (available on Coinbase) vs. Ripple (available on Binance)

Crypto Olympics Day 7: Litecoin (available on Coinbase) vs. Ethereum (available on Coinbase)

Crypto Olympics Day 8: Cardano vs. Bitcoin (available on Coinbase) Cash

Crypto Olympics Day 9: EOS vs. IOTA

Crypto Olympics Day 10: Cardano vs. EOS

Crypto Olympics Day 11: Dash vs. NEM

Crypto Olympics Day 12: Bitcoin (available on Coinbase) vs. VeChain

Crypto Olympics Day 13: VeChain vs. NEM

Crypto Olympics Day 14: EOS vs. NEM

Crypto Olympics Day 15: Ethereum (available on Coinbase) vs. EOS

Featured image: Boston

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Samara graduated from Simon Fraser University with a BA in English, minoring in Publishing and Creative Writing. One day she hopes to publish her very own novel, but in the meantime, she contents herself with blogging and editing.
She currently specializes in writing financial news and analysis, as well as cryptocurrency news and information.