Of course, people mainly share because of the lure of the airdrop, which makes everyone see it as a "good deal" – no pun intended.
But the reality: out of a hundred people who click, how many actually end up winning? How many lose out? How many become addicts to reward protocols afterward? That's the question we should be asking ourselves.
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NFT_Therapy_Group
· 9h ago
Honestly, most people are just fooled by the airdrop dream; reality is much harsher.
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PretendingSerious
· 12h ago
Really, ninety-nine percent are lured in by airdrop bait, and what’s the result? Most people are just teetering on the edge of losing money.
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ZKProofEnthusiast
· 12h ago
Really, 99% of people are just here for the airdrop, and in the end, it's still the same group of people who get caught holding the bag.
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ShibaOnTheRun
· 12h ago
Nah, but really, out of a hundred people, only two or three can make money, the rest are cannon fodder.
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EyeOfTheTokenStorm
· 12h ago
Well... from a data perspective, this airdrop scheme has already become an IQ tax harvesting machine. I quantified the historical model, and 80% of participants are actually playing a losing game.
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quietly_staking
· 12h ago
Honestly, do we still hear enough stories about 99 people losing money and 1 person making a profit... It's really time to calculate the costs.
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pvt_key_collector
· 12h ago
ngl, this is the true reflection of most people. When airdrops come, their brains stop functioning, and only after a month do they realize how much gas fees they lost.
Of course, people mainly share because of the lure of the airdrop, which makes everyone see it as a "good deal" – no pun intended.
But the reality: out of a hundred people who click, how many actually end up winning? How many lose out? How many become addicts to reward protocols afterward? That's the question we should be asking ourselves.