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Nature.cast
@simazhao
In foreign communities, many people see airdrop players as airdrop hunters or even airdrop farmers. To get airdrops, players keep creating new accounts and even use scripts to automate interactions. This is why Web3 projects are getting stricter in detecting Sybil accounts. But aside from the insider trading and profit distribution within projects, players should also think about their own direction. Should they continue as airdrop farmers or switch to another role?
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Nature.cast
@simazhao
Why Slow Down Airdrop Farming? Market downturn. In early 2025, the crypto market is weak. BTC fluctuates between $80,000 and $100,000. The hype around NFTs and new projects isn’t as strong as in 2021-2022. Airdrop returns are much lower. It used to be easy to get a 100x token from airdrops, but now making even a few dozen dollars is considered decent. Projects fighting back. Many projects either rug pull, get hacked, or change their rules. RedStone and Elixir took back rewards, Nillion adjusted its airdrop distribution, and some projects keep delaying their TGE. The risks and costs of airdrop farming are increasing. Before, getting rugged was a minor risk. Now, things have changed. At this point, it’s worth taking a step back and reconsidering whether this approach is still viable or if it’s time for a new strategy.
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Nature.cast
@simazhao
From "Farmer" to "Gardener" — Smarter Airdrop Farming If you want to keep farming but avoid risks, adjust your approach: Choose projects wisely. Focus on those with strong backing, solid tech, and real users. Act like a real user. Avoid mass accounts, use main accounts actively, and leave transaction history. Small investments, bigger gains. A little capital can increase stability in getting airdrops. Pros: Low cost, still profitable. Cons: Lower earnings, time-consuming, still a worker role.
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