I was testing a quick EthSign document flow last night inside the protocol and noticed how many CreatorPad participants were doing the same sharing screenshots of on-chain e-signature setups that actually survived multi-chain verification without breaking the legal binding part. It wasn’t flashy. It felt like people were quietly checking if Sign’s core tools could hold up for real enterprise or government contracts.
That made me pause on the token side. It’s sitting around $0.032 right now, market cap near $53 million against a $322 million FDV, with only 16.4% of the total supply in circulation. Volume keeps coming in strong relative to the cap, but the price has been drifting, as if the market is still weighing the unlock pressure more than these early product tests.
What still feels unresolved to me is how much of this testing will carry over. Sign’s long-term setup really hinges on one clear, testable point: will the practical contract-signing and verification experiments happening right now in the campaign lead to faster growth in on-chain activity and new wallet usage than the scheduled unlocks add to circulating supply? If it does, today’s softness might just be noise while the utility layer builds. If not, the attention could fade. I’m watching the actual on-chain numbers over the next few weeks to see what happens.
@SignOfficial #SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN
