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Recently, I started analyzing how the landscape of crypto airdrops has evolved, and honestly, it's quite depressing. What used to be a genuine way to distribute tokens and reward the community has turned into a free-for-all battle between projects and users.
Take Hop Protocol as an example, which was one of the first to implement a system where the community reports suspicious addresses in exchange for rewards. It sounds good in theory, but in practice, it caused brutal internal chaos. People started distrusting everyone, reporting indiscriminately. The airdrop model that promised inclusion ended up being a minefield.
Then there's Blast with its famous points system. It seems simple: lock assets, earn points. But here’s the interesting part: the big whales take most of the profits while regular users get crumbs. It’s the typical case where the airdrop mechanism disproportionately favors those who already have more.
And we can't forget LayerZero. Its Sybil detection process was so strict before launch that it ended up excluding many legitimate users. Imagine: you participate in testing, do everything right, and in the end, you're shut out. That destroys trust faster than anything.
What I see is that these twelve flagship projects have marked a breaking point. Airdrops are no longer that equal opportunity many of us believed in. Now retail investors are much more cautious because the rules are opaque and everything smells like exploitation. The initial enthusiasm has turned into skepticism.
Honestly, I think the market needs to completely rethink how airdrops work. Projects should focus on finding a true product-market fit and creating sustainable value, rather than designing increasingly complex mechanisms to filter participants. That’s what really matters in the long run.