🔰Rule No. 1: The main focus of a drop hunter is always aimed at infrastructure projects with large fundraising.

There are many reasons for this:

The project has a lot of money to reach as many people as possible with the drop. After all, the main idea of ​​drops in infrastructure projects is the team’s decentralization cache (remember Optimism, Aptos, Arbitrum).

You won't get shaved as much as smaller DeFi protocols do. The project is not interested in giving away a lot of money to a small number of users. The project is interested in giving away a conditional $2000-5000 per account so that you don’t put everything in the glass and be an active participant in the network, collecting statistics for the project’s reporting to the funds.

Simple drop criteria. Making a bunch of accounts at the start of Arbitrum Odyssey, I made a minimum number of actions and received an average drop of ~$2000 per account. To get into the basic criteria, you don’t need to go crazy and come up with sophisticated multipliers, but just need to create the appearance of an active participant in the network (more about the criteria will be in the article).

Easy to automate. Based on the simplicity of the criteria, using the software is perfect for a separate cluster of accounts.