Brothers, let me say something heart-wrenching first: after working hard for a year on interactions, when you receive the airdrop, don’t you just want to sell it immediately? That's right! Because from the very beginning, the project team regarded you as a 'mercenary' and never intended for you to be 'family.'
Recently, I strongly agree with a viewpoint: when users receive rewards based on trading volume rather than belief, what you get is not a community, but a group of mercenaries who take the money and run. Look at these projects now, low liquidity, high valuation, and a point system that’s more tiring than a job. What’s the result? Big players open thousands of wallet scripts to profit, while ordinary people work themselves to death for a sip of soup. Once the tokens are launched, everyone has only one thought in their mind—run! How is this building a community? This is clearly training everyone on how to efficiently farm and then walk away.
To put it bluntly, it's not that we retail investors are greedy; it's that this mechanism itself is inherently flawed. The project side wants the data to look good, the retail investors want quick money, and in the end, who is left exposed? The true believers have long been hurt, and those who remain are all mercenaries who follow whoever offers benefits. If you ask me, this kind of relationship based on interests will run faster than anyone when the collapse happens. When will the project side dare to distribute coins to those who don’t look at trading volume, but only at those who truly participate in governance? Only then might the crypto circle have a chance of salvation.