
BrushO Leaderboard Challenge
BrushO is excited to introduce the “Brushing Leaderboard Challenge,” a thrilling event with a total prize pool of 200,000 USDT! This competition rewards users for their brushing activity, turning daily oral care into an exciting challenge with real incentives.
Each round of rewards will be dynamically adjusted based on the number of brushing users until the reward pool is depleted.
The first round begins this week with a prize pool of 500 USDT, distributed as follows:
🏆 1st place: 200 USDT
🥈 2nd place: 100 USDT
🥉 3rd place: 50 USDT
🏅 4th-7th place: 30 USDT each
🎖 8th-10th place: 10 USDT each

Joining the competition is simple and fun! Follow these steps to start earning:
Each week, participants will be ranked in real-time on the BrushO leaderboard. The top 10 users with the highest brushing activity will earn USDT rewards from the 200,000 USDT prize pool.
The BrushO Leaderboard Competition is held weekly, so there are fresh opportunities to top the leaderboard and win every week!
As far as BrushO goes, brushing isn’t about oral care; it is more about innovation, rewards, and community engagement. Here’s your opportunity to embrace the future of oral health, earn rewards, and join the Web3 and AI-powered oral care revolution through the BrushO Leaderboard Challenge.
Mar 25
Mar 20

Missed lunch brushing often hides inside normal work routines instead of feeling like a conscious choice. Time logs, calendar gaps, and daily patterns can reveal where the habit breaks down and why simple awareness often fixes more than extra motivation does.

Warm tea can feel soothing at first, but repeated sipping can keep a small canker sore active by extending heat, dryness, acidity, and friction across already irritated tissue. The problem is often the sipping pattern, not the tea alone.

A retainer can look freshly cleaned and still pick up old residue from its case. When moisture, biofilm, and handling build up inside the container, the case can quietly place plaque back onto the appliance each time it is stored.

Pulp horns extend higher inside the crown than many people realize, which helps explain why small wear, chips, or cavities can become sensitive faster than expected. Surface damage and inner anatomy are often closer neighbors than they appear from outside.

Protein bars often feel convenient and tidy, but their sticky texture can lodge behind crowded lower teeth where saliva and the tongue do not clear residue quickly. That lingering film can feed plaque long after the snack feels finished.

Perikymata are tiny natural enamel surface lines, and when they fade unevenly they can reveal where daily wear has slowly polished the tooth. Their pattern offers a subtle clue about abrasion, erosion, and long-term enamel change.

Many people brush while shifting attention between the sink, the mirror, and other small distractions. Subtle handle nudges can stabilize that switching by bringing focus back during the exact moments when route control and coverage usually start to drift.

Fizzy mixers can seem harmless in the evening, but repeated acidic, carbonated sipping may keep exposed dentin reactive long after dinner. The issue is often not one drink alone, but the long pattern of bubbles, acid, and slow nighttime contact.

Food packing is not random. The tiny shape and tightness of tooth contact points strongly influence where fibers, seeds, and soft fragments get trapped first, especially when bite guidance and tooth form direct chewing into the same narrow spaces again and again.

Allergy heavy mornings can make tongue coating seem thicker because mouth breathing, postnasal drip, dryness, and slower oral clearing all build on each other before the day fully starts. The coating is often about the whole morning pattern, not the tongue alone.