Airdrops: crypto's double-edged sword. On one hand, they're the gateway drug for mass adoption—lowest friction entry point, free tokens, instant participation. People who'd never touch crypto otherwise suddenly find themselves with a wallet and assets. On the flip side, airdrops attract the wrong crowd. Token hunters, reward farmers, bot networks. Most airdrop recipients dump immediately, creating selling pressure and noise rather than genuine community members. So which is it? The democratization tool or the industry's worst habit? Depends on execution.

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ChainBrainvip
· 01-11 20:57
Airdrops are just a way to scam retail investors; what percentage of users truly stick around in the long run?
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GateUser-3824aa38vip
· 01-11 20:48
Airdrops, in the nicest terms, are like sugar-coated bullets that attract people in; in less flattering terms, they're just new tricks to harvest the inexperienced. How many truly believe in them?
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MidnightMEVeatervip
· 01-11 20:47
Good morning everyone, at 3 a.m. I thought of something again—airdrops are basically liquidity traps set up for retail investors. It sounds democratic, but in reality, it's a feast for robot farms. Big players are waiting for you to dump in dark pools.
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GateUser-6bc33122vip
· 01-11 20:34
Sugar-coated bullets, they collapse when they arrive. The problem isn't with the airdrop itself.
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