The fruit platter at KTV is 198, you don't bargain, 699 for beer, you keep ordering one after another, for the 900 girl, you ordered two at once, 398 for the massage, you add by the clock, Sinopec raised a few cents, you people are lining up all night, you people!
In the past, everyone talked about $SIGN more from the perspective of 'airdropping' users. But if you shift your perspective to the Middle East, you will find it's a completely different story. Here, it's not about who gets how much, but about—who will provide the underlying trust.
@SignOfficial Recently, the collaboration with Blockchain Centre Abu Dhabi has actually highlighted the issue: it has begun to enter the narrative of 'sovereign-level applications'. On-chain identities, verifiable data, compliant distribution—once these things enter government or public systems, the meaning changes.
For ordinary users, it is a tool; for countries, it is infrastructure.
So looking at $SIGN again, I prefer to consider it as an 'entry point for trust' rather than just a simple airdrop project. Especially in the Middle East, where the financial system is being restructured, once it gets running smoothly, the replication potential will be significant.
Some things, when the market understands them, are often no longer cheap.
