Airdrop is an event that provides billions of dollars of free money to users. However, they never cease to be controversial as users always complain about the fairness of the token allocation process.

What are the causes? Most people attribute it to the presence of Sybil – airdrop farmers who create large clusters of wallet addresses and use them to create large transaction footprints on cryptocurrency projects.

Now, even in the midst of a booming quarter for airdrop activity, these concerns are threatening to turn organic crypto platform users apathetic.

Bow to pressure

Projects like Ethena have bowed to pressure and tried to appease users who felt cheated during the project's airdrop.

But more recent airdrops from blockchain network ZKsync and interoperability protocol LayerZero have not publicly responded to complaints from legitimate users – who claim they were left out.

Farea – an airdrop hunter said:

“Farmers received millions of tokens from ZKsync, but those who actually worked on this for two years only received a mere 1,200 tokens.”

Fake Sybil airdrop farmers operate legitimately and claim larger stakes than the average airdrop, causing regular users to receive little or nothing for their efforts.

The attacks come as projects such as liquidity restaking firm Swell, DeFi lending company Marginfi, and liquidity staking protocols Sanctum have hinted at hosting airdrops in the future.

A serious problem

There is a big problem with the airdrop mechanism, not only for users but also for projects promising these free tokens.

Cryptocurrency projects desire organic user activity to achieve “network effects” – where the value of the project increases as the number of patrons increases.

Project development teams will offer airdrops as an incentive to attract real users. The promise of a future airdrop could be enough to entice people to deposit crypto.

Liquidity inflow is an indicator that measures the increase in total value locked – a DeFi metric used to gauge interest in blockchain projects.

Crypto projects need to increase TVL to secure large valuations supported by venture capital interest.

“If you are a builder, you have to launch point campaigns, as VCs require adoption metrics to justify high valuations,” anonymous DeFi researcher Ignas shares.

But the problem is that most of this TVL comes from Sybil farmers – people who are less likely to leave their coins in place after they receive the airdrop. They tend to move to other projects that have not yet allocated tokens.

Several projects, including Wormhole and LayerZero, have seen a significant drop in user activity post-airdrop.

Meanwhile, actual users who are more likely to stick with these projects say they receive little reward for their on-chain activity.

“Whales spend a lot of money on scripts and earn hundreds of wallets. Retail users do one or two wallets so they don't receive the actual rewards they should have received,” Farea said.

A new era

Despite the growing frustration, DeFi experts agree that project teams must develop new strategies for token distribution.

“Airdrops are an evolution in the way new tokens are released to the market,” said Ignas. Every cycle, we find a new way to print tokens.”

The current popularity of points in DeFi projects has clear limitations amid poor sound capture and user retention.

“The golden age of airdrops is over,” crypto analyst nicknamed Wazz posted on X earlier this week.

There are growing calls for project teams to rethink airdrops and come up with a reward system that does not ignore early adopters and maintains interest after the token distribution event while also attracting new ones join.

This is easier said than done, especially when the syllables are so ingrained in the system that it can be difficult to get rid of them.

For experts like Ignas, some possible solutions include timing airdrops to reduce subsequent mass dumping.

Additionally, projects can plan multiple airdrops, a method that has been adopted by companies like Etherfi.

Still, experts say no airdrop strategy is perfect and complaints are bound to arise.

“My advice is to use protocols that you actually find interesting. The best airdrops I get come from genuine curiosity that makes me click the buttons.”



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