All stand up and look over here!!! All stand up and look over here!!!
Friends who are still playing with airdrops, what are you still thinking about?
Airdrops can basically be divided into three categories:
The first category is a way to participate for free but require people to be recruited. There are indeed some bad projects that use this model to operate similar to pyramid schemes, which may cause participants to waste time and energy, and even face potential fraud risks.
The second category increases the threshold and fairness of airdrops to a certain extent by obtaining qualifications, but it is also necessary to carefully identify the authenticity and reliability of the project.
The third category is to pledge funds to obtain airdrop tokens. The risk is indeed greater. Not only is there a risk of market fluctuations, but it may also be at a disadvantage due to the difference in the amount of funds. For inexperienced newbies, it should not be tried easily.
It should be reminded that the field of virtual currency is full of uncertainty and risks, and related transactions are not protected by law in my country. Participants should be extremely cautious to avoid unnecessary losses.
Generally speaking, airdrops can earn some pocket money, but they all take a lot of time and energy or money.
Most airdrops are done and then nothing happens. A small number of airdrop tokens may not be worth as much as the gas fee. I did an airdrop in the gaming field at the end of April, but the requirement for the airdrop was that there must be 0.001 eth in the address. I went to the exchange and bought more than 10 U of eth. When I withdrew it to my wallet, I lost half of the eth. As a result, when the coin was issued in early May, the value of the coin was not as high as the gas fee when I withdrew it.
There are also some airdrops that confirm the issuance of tokens, but generally many conditions must be met to achieve it, such as the top few points, the amount of interaction, and the holding of some NFTs. There are very few places, and generally 10% of the participation is very good. Most people are just foils, working for the project party in vain. For example, in the previous avail project, I did that light node task, rented a VPS to test the node, and got an NFT. I thought the airdrop was stable, but it turned out that there was not a single hair.
There is also the MSN. You use VPS to mine points on gaganode, and you need to exchange the points for MSN on the test network. It was said to be mapped to the main network, but it turned out to be a 1% exchange rate. It seems that more than 90,000 people received it, but I didn’t. I saw that the first place on the speed test network had an address with tens of millions of MSNs, but he only received a few hundred MSNs. Most of them were 10MSNs, and 1MSN was just a little over a u. There was a guy who posted in the community that he had been mining with a graphics card for a year, but in the end he only had a dozen u. It really made me laugh to death.
In conclusion, you will not make money from airdrops, and you will be cheated. The ones who make money are those who teach others how to airdrops, such as publishing relevant tutorials on public accounts to collect advertising fees, and those who charge to teach others how to airdrops to make money.
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