A few of them that I have seen and personally I think that they are really good are: Agridigital.io, agriledger.io, Te-food.com, etc. That’s the few I can remember, and they are doing perfectly fine, although they might not be so popular to the extent of you hearing their names and seeing them everywhere on the web.
And what a surprise they don't use a token, they don't have a coin or went through an ICO or IPO and they don't actually have anything to do with real farming but rather transaction brokerage and food and produce traceability, which helps the farmers about 0.01%
I believe that what agriculture really needs is funding; a lot of farmers don’t have enough funds to be able to reach their full potential, so as long as they are given those funds, they will be able to produce more agricultural products and as generate more income. So there should be good platforms that would be giving them this access to investors, which I believe is the target of some of these platforms.
Ever wondered why it is so hard to get access to funding for agricultural farming businesses, even in the EU or US? It's because the profit margins even in good years aren't high at all, right now the average is almost matching the inflation line, and this with all the subsidies from the government. Have a bad year and you barely keep it running without losing money, make a few wrong decisions on what crops you plant, and just because farmers in another country did the same the prices would plunge and you're again in red.
Everyone talks about investing and poeple making money, but it's not like that, I can show you tens of pictures of formers farms all across central Europe who went bankrupt and are not even worth a penny, dilapidated buildings for who the current owner would pay you money when selling them. Europe has abandoned 200 000km2 of agricultural land in the last two decades, almost twice the size of Portugal.
You’d see people talk about other projects, like gaming, but you wouldn’t see anyone talking about agriculture. Another thing is that the team behind these projects needs to add extra efforts in pushing these projects further to success.
And it's better this way because while everyone can become a gamer about 99% of the people know shit about agriculture, for most of them is plowing throwing seed and fertilizer, and then getting the crop if I ask about selling moisture levels, drying costs, kernel respiration rates I'm going to see a lot of Pikachu faces.
Let's go into hog farming or cattle and I'm going to tell you that safety and environmental regulations are stuffier than all the whitepapers for all the tokens in the world combined.
So let's leave things for the ones that know about it and stop throwing money at obvious get-rich schemes (for the "dev" team).