Traditional tokenomics design often falls into the same dilemma: a large portion of tokens flow to insiders and early participants, and then suddenly crash into ordinary users, making it difficult for the project to sustain. Some projects are trying a reverse approach. Take Solstice as an example, its token distribution ratio is significantly different—60% of $SLX directly goes to ecosystem users and participants. Specifically, 50% is allocated to ecosystem incentive programs, including liquidity guidance, protocol integration, TVL growth projects, etc., with a focus on attracting genuine usage rather than speculation. The remaining 10% has other purposes. This design logic is very clear: making users the main beneficiaries, rather than the other way around.
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Traditional tokenomics design often falls into the same dilemma: a large portion of tokens flow to insiders and early participants, and then suddenly crash into ordinary users, making it difficult for the project to sustain. Some projects are trying a reverse approach. Take Solstice as an example, its token distribution ratio is significantly different—60% of $SLX directly goes to ecosystem users and participants. Specifically, 50% is allocated to ecosystem incentive programs, including liquidity guidance, protocol integration, TVL growth projects, etc., with a focus on attracting genuine usage rather than speculation. The remaining 10% has other purposes. This design logic is very clear: making users the main beneficiaries, rather than the other way around.