More Money, Less Tokens?
It’s no surprise that bigger fundraises tend to dominate mindshare - large rounds act as instant signal boosts, drawing in users who (often rightly) expect a juicy airdrop to follow (if there’s a token coming, why would it trade below the latest valuation?)
The tradeoff:
The bigger the raise, the tighter the token distribution usually gets. Whether it’s sybils or cap table constraints, most high-profile drops end up heavily diluted. Once capital is locked in, there’s rarely room left for a generous community slice.
That’s why stories like Hyperliquid and Kaito stand out.
Both bootstrapped growth. Both gave back meaningfully.
Hyperliquid dropped 30% of supply & was entirely bootstrapped.
Kaito raised just $10M, yet still allocated 10% to its community (yes only 3% was actually claimed I know but still).
What if:
Smaller raises could actually prove to be a competitive edge - giving teams more flexibility to reward early adopters & create those success stories that convert farmers into long term evangelists & attract the next wave of believers?
With that lens, a few current projects stand out as ones to watch:
- Ethos (~$2M raised)
- Abstract (~$11M)
- Theoriq ($10M+)
- OpenLedger ($8M+)
- Mitosis ($7M+)
I don't have the answers but I'll be bookmarking this hypothesis for future receipts

2,915
0
本頁面內容由第三方提供。除非另有說明,OKX 不是所引用文章的作者,也不對此類材料主張任何版權。該內容僅供參考,並不代表 OKX 觀點,不作為任何形式的認可,也不應被視為投資建議或購買或出售數字資產的招攬。在使用生成式人工智能提供摘要或其他信息的情況下,此類人工智能生成的內容可能不準確或不一致。請閱讀鏈接文章,瞭解更多詳情和信息。OKX 不對第三方網站上的內容負責。包含穩定幣、NFTs 等在內的數字資產涉及較高程度的風險,其價值可能會產生較大波動。請根據自身財務狀況,仔細考慮交易或持有數字資產是否適合您。

