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September 27, 2023, 09:50:31 AM |
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I recently dived into Friend.Tech, thanks to an enlightening discussion on Twitter. It's an emerging SocialFi platform that encapsulates the spirit of Web3: decentralization, user-driven value, and digital tokenization. Users mint their own tokens, or "keys", which give others access to their exclusive rooms. As more people want to join, the value of these keys surges, and the key creators earn a piece of each transaction. With over 200,000 users already, its traction is undeniable.
This surge in popularity recalls the gold-rush days of ICOs, the DeFi summer, and the explosive NFT markets. Each wave brought with it innovation, speculation, and a myriad of success stories. However, a common thread runs through them: they all employ a zero-sum game mechanism. Essentially, early movers and issuers enjoy significant gains, often at the expense of latecomers.
Yet, isn’t it fascinating how such models attract massive interest? The secret sauce isn't just the potential for profit. It's the narrative crafted around it. For Friend.Tech, it's the allure of shared insights, camaraderie, or simply the human touch. Similarly, for ICOs, it was about revolutionary projects; for NFTs, it's the blend of art, ownership, and technology.
So, when we dissect what makes a Web3 project soar, we're left with a triad of considerations:
Technology: The underlying infrastructure that supports the idea. Vision: The story and future possibilities it promises. Business Model: The economic framework that determines its sustainability and profitability. It seems that in the whirlwind space of Web3, while technology lays the foundation, it's often the vision that entices users and the business model that either cements or erodes its longevity.
This prompts a crucial reflection: In the Web3 domain, is it the innovators that reimagine asset trading who reap the most rewards? Or is it those who tell the most compelling story?
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