A lot of people only notice the token after it drops.

They don’t see the mess before it.

The broken Discord roles. The wallet spreadsheets nobody fully trusts. The failed KYC checks. The random forms. The manual reviews. The confusion over who actually qualified and who got left out.

That’s the part I think $SIGN is really pointing at.

Not just moving tokens, but fixing the ugly layer underneath distribution itself the proof, the eligibility, the verification, the logic behind who gets what.

That’s where most projects still fall apart.

So to me, $SIGN gets interesting when you stop looking at it like just another token and start looking at the infrastructure problem it’s attached to.

Because that problem is real, and the industry still hasn’t solved it properly.

#SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN @SignOfficial