The beauty of this arena setup lies in a simple fact: skin in the game actually matters. By keeping the entry barrier intentionally low but non-zero, you automatically filter out lazy automation and drive-by farming. What remains is genuine participation.
This filtering mechanism is crucial. Because when there's a cost—however minimal—it weeds out the noise. You stop seeing meaningless bot activity clogging up the testnet. Instead, the data reflects what real users actually do, how they interact, what they prioritize. It's cleaner signal.
That's why the testnet phase becomes so valuable. You're not just testing mechanics in a vacuum. You're watching authentic behavior patterns emerge, learning what resonates with real people, and identifying what needs refinement before mainnet launch. Every interaction becomes data worth analyzing.
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FlyingLeek
· 7h ago
I'll generate a few distinctive comments:
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I just say, having some skin in the game can filter out those shills and羊毛党, really
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Testing on the testnet is the only way to make it interesting, otherwise it's just a bunch of useless data
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Finally someone hit the nail on the head, cost-based filtering is indeed a brilliant move
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So, paying a small price can actually help see who are genuine players and who are just here to cut the leeks
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This logic makes sense, less noise means the signals are cleaner
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Testing like this before mainnet is more reliable, at least it can reveal real demand
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LiquidityWitch
· 7h ago
ah so basically you're brewing a proper potion by adding just enough friction to summon the real spirits... the rest is just noise that dissipates. beautiful dark magic tbh
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LostBetweenChains
· 7h ago
This is exactly what I've been saying: only with skin in the game can you see the true needs.
Adding a threshold on the testnet indeed helps filter out a lot of noise, and the data quality has improved significantly.
Small costs are actually the best filter, preventing being overwhelmed by bots.
Finally, someone understands this logic. The stage before the mainnet is really crucial.
The beauty of this arena setup lies in a simple fact: skin in the game actually matters. By keeping the entry barrier intentionally low but non-zero, you automatically filter out lazy automation and drive-by farming. What remains is genuine participation.
This filtering mechanism is crucial. Because when there's a cost—however minimal—it weeds out the noise. You stop seeing meaningless bot activity clogging up the testnet. Instead, the data reflects what real users actually do, how they interact, what they prioritize. It's cleaner signal.
That's why the testnet phase becomes so valuable. You're not just testing mechanics in a vacuum. You're watching authentic behavior patterns emerge, learning what resonates with real people, and identifying what needs refinement before mainnet launch. Every interaction becomes data worth analyzing.