By daniel227 on Skatehive
There was a time when success in Nigeria meant three things: a government job, a plot of land in the village, and a Toyota Corolla. But in 2025, if you ask a Gen Z Nigerian what success means, they’ll probably answer while sipping bubble tea, designing graphics on Canva, or tweeting about therapy.This new generation isn’t just changing the game — they’re quietly rewriting the rules entirely. And unlike older generations, they’re not shouting about it. It’s a soft revolution, carried out with vibes, VPNs, and vlogs.For them, remote work isn’t a luxury — it’s the default. Side hustles aren’t side anything — they’re the main plot. Gen Z Nigerians are ghostwriting, drop-shipping, crypto-trading, UX-designing, and affiliate-marketing their way out of the cycle of lack. And they’re doing it without the constant performance of 'hustle culture.'Most of them don’t want to be 'big men.' They want to be free. Financially free. Mentally free. Free from pressure, trauma, and noise.They journal, the