I just joined Tedoge. Claim 5000 TEDOGE and enter the pool.
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Lately I’ve been thinking about how social platforms are evolving, and honestly $Dunk is one of the more interesting experiments happening right now. At first glance it looks like a simple engagement system layered on top of Farcaster, but once you actually start participating you realize there’s much more structure behind it. The most obvious difference is the limitation system. Users are allowed only three qualified Yaps per day. Each post must also be spaced at least two hours apart. That simple design decision changes everything about how people use $Dunk. Instead of rushing to post quickly, people slow down. They observe the feed and think about what kind of post might create engagement. Every Yap becomes more intentional and thoughtful.
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Posts that generate replies are especially valuable. Replies show that someone cared enough to respond and join the conversation. That level of interaction strengthens community connections. It’s also one of the best signals of quality inside $Dunk. Another important rule is originality. The same cast cannot be counted twice, which means repeated content offers no advantage. Participants must continually bring new ideas or perspectives. This creative requirement keeps the ecosystem fresh and dynamic within $Dunk. Over time, you begin noticing patterns. Certain topics spark curiosity and discussion.
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