When it comes to L1 or L2 blockchains, real success boils down to one thing: whether users actually bridge their assets over, get active onchain, and genuinely use the ecosystem. That could mean trading on a decentralized perpetuals exchange, participating in staking mechanisms, or even engaging with blockchain games.
The mechanics are straightforward but critical. Without meaningful user participation and application adoption, even the most technically sophisticated chain struggles to gain traction. This is why incentive programs have become such a big part of the strategy. Projects understand that bootstrapping liquidity and user engagement requires more than just launching infrastructure—it takes thoughtful tokenomics and reward structures that actually pull people in and keep them engaged with the broader ecosystem.
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just_another_fish
· 10h ago
In plain terms, it means someone has to actually use it; otherwise, no matter how great the chain is, it's all just empty talk.
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AirdropCollector
· 10h ago
In plain terms, you need to offer enough incentives; otherwise, even the most powerful blockchain is just a castle in the air.
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SchrodingersPaper
· 10h ago
At the end of the day, it's still just relying on subsidies to keep things going. What about real demand? Once a bunch of incentives are burned through, users also leave.
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AirdropFatigue
· 10h ago
In plain terms, it means someone has to actually use it; otherwise, no matter how awesome the chain is, it's just empty talk.
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StopLossMaster
· 10h ago
In simple terms, it means it has to be genuinely used; a chain without users is just empty air.
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ClassicDumpster
· 10h ago
Basically, it's about burning money on subsidies to retain users. A chain without users is useless no matter how awesome it is.
When it comes to L1 or L2 blockchains, real success boils down to one thing: whether users actually bridge their assets over, get active onchain, and genuinely use the ecosystem. That could mean trading on a decentralized perpetuals exchange, participating in staking mechanisms, or even engaging with blockchain games.
The mechanics are straightforward but critical. Without meaningful user participation and application adoption, even the most technically sophisticated chain struggles to gain traction. This is why incentive programs have become such a big part of the strategy. Projects understand that bootstrapping liquidity and user engagement requires more than just launching infrastructure—it takes thoughtful tokenomics and reward structures that actually pull people in and keep them engaged with the broader ecosystem.