By: ChandlerZ, Foresight News
On July 13, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong publicly acknowledged on X that the content coins strategy, pursued for over a year on the Base network, had failed. Starting in 2025, Base aggressively promoted content coins through the Zora platform, embedding them as a core feature in its own wallet product. This initially propelled Base to become the L2 chain with the highest volume of new token issuance.

Brian Armstrong stated, "It didn't work, and we pivoted earlier this year. We messed up, time to move on." The ZORA token, which provided the core infrastructure for this experiment, has fallen approximately 95% from its all-time high last August, with its market capitalization shrinking from about $550 million to around $30 million.

From 'Every Post is a Coin' to 'We Messed Up'
Brian Armstrong's statement provides the clearest official characterization of failure for Base's roughly year-long creator token experiment. In July 2025, Coinbase rebranded Coinbase Wallet as the Base App, simultaneously adding social feeds, chat, payments, trading, and app discovery features. When Base opened the app to over 140 countries in December of the same year, it was still defined as an integrated product for social interaction, trading, and payments.
Base's creator economy was powered by underlying tools from the on-chain social platform Zora. A content coin corresponded to a specific post; when a user published an image, video, or text, the system would simultaneously create a freely tradable ERC-20 token. Each content coin had a fixed supply of 1 billion tokens, with the creator receiving 1% (10 million tokens) directly at launch. The token initially had no price; a market price formed on-chain as other users bought in, with subsequent buying and selling determining the market cap and holder profits or losses.

Buyers acquired a token associated with the post, which they could sell to the market at any time. The token did not include copyright to the post, nor did it represent equity in the creator, future revenue, or profit sharing. Zora's terms of service limited its use to entertainment, use, and consumption, requiring users to confirm their purchase was not for equity or profit-sharing purposes. Therefore, a buyer's profit primarily depended on whether later participants were willing to buy at a higher price.
Creator coins used an entire account as the subject, with each Zora account having only one. It also had a supply of 1 billion tokens, with 50% entering the open market and the other 50% vesting linearly to the creator over five years. Content coins published thereafter by that account would be linked to the creator coin. Zora hoped popular content would increase demand for the creator coin. Creators could sell their allocated tokens and also received a share from each transaction fee. Base claimed at the time that this structure could bypass ads, brand partnerships, and follower count thresholds, directly converting attention into trading revenue.
100,000 Tokens Launched in a Day, Trading Didn't Retain Users
Low-cost token issuance quickly inflated Base's surface-level activity. In August 2025, following the relaunch of the Base App, Zora's activity reached an all-time high. Over 1.6 million creator coins were minted, with nearly 3 million unique traders and a total trading volume exceeding $470 million. The price of the ZORA token also rose nearly 5-fold within a month.

In April 2025, after the official Base account published the "Base is for everyone" content via Zora, the system automatically generated a token of the same name. The token surged briefly after launch before plummeting about 95% within hours. Base explained that the official account did not sell the token nor issue it as a formal project, but ordinary users found it difficult to distinguish between a content post, a token issuance, and official endorsement.
Creator Nick Shirley's token later provided a more direct case study. Shirley's investigative video garnered over 100 million views on social media, and Brian Armstrong had publicly promoted it. His creator coin's market cap once reached $15 million before rapidly retreating. Viral spread brought short-term buying pressure but failed to establish sustained demand for the token.
The collaboration between Base and Zora also sparked discontent among ecosystem developers. Some developers felt Base devoted excessive exposure and resources to Zora and creator coins, which neither created stable user moats nor crowded out display opportunities for other Base projects. The community member who questioned Brian Armstrong on July 13 also pointed out that many participants suffered losses as token prices fell.
Defending Content Coins in January, Retreating by February
Brian Armstrong was still defending the model as recently as January of this year. Responding to a former Coinbase engineer's critique of the zero-sum nature of content coins, he argued that buying content coins generated economic value and demand for creator coins. Roughly a month later, the Base App announced the discontinuation of Creator Rewards and removed the social feed powered by Farcaster, shifting the product focus toward tradable assets.
In March, Brian Armstrong admitted in a podcast for the first time that the SocialFi features of the Base App "didn't work that well." Base's subsequently released 2026 strategy placed trading and stablecoin payments at its core. Official disclosures stated that Base processed over $17 trillion in stablecoin transaction volume in 2025, covering 26 local currencies and 17 countries. These figures provided clearer commercial justification for pivoting toward financial infrastructure.
In the same thread, Armstrong rebutted another criticism. @smileyXBT suggested Base's heavy bet on AI agents was repeating the cycle of chasing hype. Armstrong responded that Base's roadmap had always prioritized trading, payments, and AI agents in that order, with most resources currently directed toward trading.
From Base's official coin minting in April 2025 to Armstrong's "we messed up" in July 2026—15 months in between. ZORA's market capitalization evaporated nearly $500 million. Throughout this process, Coinbase doubled down, embedding Zora into its wallet product, encouraging funds to establish creator token indices, and providing platform-level exposure for tokens from insiders.
Coinbase can relegate these 15 months to a concluded product experiment, but the losses in holders' accounts won't disappear with the strategic pivot.





