@nguyenductai266
Espresso plans to allocate 10% of its total token supply to 1 million wallets.
At first glance, that might sound like a “dust” airdrop — but not necessarily.
What really matters is the project’s FDV at launch.
If we assume (purely hypothetically) that every wallet gets an equal share, the token would need roughly a $10B FDV for each participant to receive about $1,000 in value.
But that’s not how airdrops usually work:
• allocations are rarely equal
• major contributors typically get larger shares
• smaller participants receive less
And realistically, a $10B launch valuation is a long shot.
So the likely outcome is this: a small group of users could receive solid rewards, while the majority may end up with relatively small allocations.
In the end, airdrop value isn’t determined by the number of wallets — it’s driven by valuation and how the tokens are distributed.