I’ll be honest, at first I didn’t take OBI too seriously.
It looked like the usual crypto pattern big numbers, token rewards, people rushing in trying not to miss out. We’ve all seen this before. Join early, do a few tasks, maybe hold something, and hope it pays off.
But the more I looked at it, the more it started to feel… different.
This doesn’t feel like a typical airdrop. It feels more like someone is quietly testing how people behave when everything is transparent and recorded. Nothing is hidden. If you participate, it’s visible. If you don’t, the system knows. There’s no guessing.
What really stood out to me is how rewards are structured.
It’s not just about holding tokens. It’s about how long you hold them.
That simple idea changes the whole mindset. Instead of jumping in and out quickly, you’re pushed to slow down. To stay. To be consistent. And in a space where most people are chasing fast gains, that’s actually a big shift.
There’s also this feeling that you’re not completely on your own here.
Some parts of the system depend on overall activity. If more people participate properly, the outcome improves for everyone. It creates this quiet sense of “we’re all in this together,” even if no one says it out loud.
But at the same time, there are real questions.
A 100M pool sounds huge, but when millions of people are involved, it doesn’t stretch as far as it seems. And beyond Season 1, things are still unclear. No one really knows what comes next, which makes everything feel a bit uncertain.
So I keep coming back to one thought:
Are people actually using this… or just trying to get something out of it?
Because that’s what really matters.
If it’s only about rewards, people will leave the moment incentives disappear. That always happens. But if people keep showing up, even when there’s nothing to gain, then something real has been built.
And maybe that’s the whole point.
Maybe this isn’t just about tokens.
Maybe it’s about seeing who stays.

