Recently, the DeFi community has been flooded with news—Hyperliquid, a decentralized trading protocol, airdropped its token $HYPE for the first time, and the scale was quite outrageous.



Let's start with the numbers: 274 million HYPE tokens were distributed all at once, covering over 94,000 wallet addresses. This magnitude directly set the record for the largest airdrop in DeFi history, and major media outlets are praising it as a "industry豪礼."

From the project's perspective, there's nothing wrong with this approach—spending money to attract early users, quickly accumulating trading volume and liquidity, is indeed a common tactic to create a popular application. Sounds appealing.

But here’s where things start to go wrong. The real controversy isn’t about how big the airdrop was, but whether the distribution of these 274 million HYPE tokens was fair or not. Various voices are emerging in the community:

Are the eligibility criteria transparent? Is the defense against sybil attacks strong enough? Are those who have been using the product early on getting rewarded fairly, or are they being squeezed out by opportunists?

You see, this is awkward. An airdrop can generate hype, indicating the project is indeed popular; but attracting so many doubts precisely shows that the distribution rules are unconvincing.

Think about it—what sustains a project’s long-term vitality? Isn’t it community trust? Relying solely on impressive airdrop numbers can’t fool anyone. Fair rules, transparent mechanisms—these are the real things that can truly retain people's trust.

What do you think about Hyperliquid’s approach this time?
HYPE2.95%
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HodlTheDoorvip
· 7h ago
Another airdrop and trust, it sounds great but in reality? Anyway, I didn't get anything valuable.
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BlockchainNewbievip
· 7h ago
It's the same old trick again—spending money to buy hype, which ends up exposing your lack of professionalism.
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SignatureAnxietyvip
· 7h ago
It's the same old story. Throwing money at it can solve some problems, but the key is that the rules need to be clearly explained.
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Layer2Arbitrageurvip
· 7h ago
LMAO, 274 million tokens are directly dumped, the numbers are indeed intimidating, but you can tell from the trading volume curve whether it's real or fake. They haven't implemented proper Sybil protection at all, and the distribution rules have huge vulnerabilities. The genuine early users have been pushed out by sheep-wooling accounts, a classic case of adverse selection. That's why I never rely on airdrops themselves, only on the actual profit after gas optimization.
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GasFeeCriervip
· 8h ago
It's the same airdrop trick again, big numbers are big, but the distribution rules are a mess... Truly capable projects wouldn't just rely on throwing money to bluff, right?
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SerLiquidatedvip
· 8h ago
Another big airdrop trick to fool people. Honestly, it's just spending money to buy hype.
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