WLD has been trading near a critical resistance point. The $0.40 level is where traders are watching closely — a hold there could push the token toward $0.45 and eventually $0.57, while a failure might drag it back to the $0.23 range.
A Bot Problem Gets A Music AngleWorld Network’s identity tool, World ID, sits at the center of the deal. The system is built to confirm that users are real people rather than automated accounts, and the concert tie-up put that capability in front of audiences well beyond the usual crypto crowd.

Bots dominate online activity in ways that directly affect ordinary people. Reports indicate that automated traffic now accounts for more than half of all internet activity, a reality that has made it routine for concert tickets to sell out in seconds only to resurface on resale sites at inflated prices.
Adoption Hopes Drive The RallyReports say industry voices quickly amplified the announcement, with commentary from Pantera Capital and others pointing to growing demand for reliable human verification as bots flood more corners of the internet. That broader framing gave the partnership a weight that went beyond a single ticket sale.
The token’s next move will depend on whether buyers can defend the ground gained. Based on reports, if $0.40 flips from resistance into support, the path opens toward $0.45 and $0.57. A stall at current levels, though, brings the $0.23 support zone back into the picture.
The Thirty Seconds to Mars deal adds a real-world name to a project that has spent much of its existence explaining its potential rather than demonstrating it. Whether one partnership translates into lasting price strength is another question entirely.
Featured image from thirtysecondstomars.com, chart from TradingView



















