If this doesn't get considerably better, the upcoming airdrop is going to be the burial of the coin... unless the amounts to be distributed are incremented substantially. Giving 3 euros to every Spaniard that claims them, with the caveat of having to produce personal information and no use for them other than sell them in an exchange for which they need to register and pay commission? I'd say 98% of Spaniards will no "No, gracias".
Will 1,000 (30 euros) do better? Just an idea... if the airdrop is not a huge success, the coin will hit the dirt under Pesetacoin.
The biggest mistake off all those nation coins is that they are doing things in the exact opposite order for it to be successful, simply because it's easier.
Launching a coin is easy, distributing it - a bit harder. Creating a real world platform to buy commodities and services - hardest.
However, the correct order to make a successful coin, national or otherwise, is first finding businesses to accept it and create physical exchanges to fiat (like the bitcoin ATM machines), then distribute it freely to citizens and open it for mining in the home country only (using the same mechanism as for the airdrop for the wallets themselves), and only then open it for mining and exchange globally.
Unfortunately this is too difficult, and that's why nation coins are destined to fail, because do what is easy to do, and not what is needed to be done, that's why all we get is pump and dump.
I say this as a bag holder of SPA, I hoped it will succeed, but it probably won't and I lost all my money.