Reevaluating the Public Blockchain Ecosystem with the Logic of Governance: Examining Solana's Ecological Transformation through Singapore's Prosperity and Costs

marsbit發佈於 2026-03-20更新於 2026-03-20

文章摘要

This article draws a parallel between the development of the Solana blockchain and the nation-building journey of Singapore, arguing that managing a public blockchain is akin to governing a digital nation. The analysis is structured in six chapters. It begins by comparing Solana's initial heavy reliance on Sam Bankman-Fried and FTX for growth and credibility to Singapore's post-independence dependence on British military spending. The sudden collapse of FTX in 2022 is framed as Solana's pivotal crisis moment, forcing it to find a new path for survival, much like when Britain withdrew its forces from Singapore's sole innate resource was its strategic geographic location, which it leveraged to become a trade hub. Similarly, Solana's foundational resource is its high-performance architecture, enabling fast and cheap transactions, which is its competitive advantage for attracting users and developers. The article then examines a "grey" survival phase. Post-FTX, Solana experienced a boom in meme coin trading, facilitated by platforms like Pump.fun. This is compared to Singapore's pragmatic acceptance of capital from questionable sources during its early development to build its financial reserves and user base. The key insight is that while this activity was speculative and chaotic, it provided essential transaction volume, new adopters, and stress-tested the network's infrastructure, all while more substantial development continued underneath. A core section explores monetary ...

Author: danny

When we talk about public blockchains in a bear market, what are we discussing? Price? Community? Or governance? The more fundamental question is: operating a public blockchain is essentially governing a digital country. Tokens are currency, developers are citizens, DApps are industries, and on-chain governance is the government. If we reexamine Solana's development history from the perspective of governance, many seemingly accidental decisions have clear logic behind them.

Introduction: No One Is Born Strong

On August 9, 1965, Lee Kuan Yew shed tears in front of television cameras. Singapore was "kicked out" of the Malaysian Federation, becoming a tiny island nation with no hinterland, no resources, and no military. No one believed it could survive.

On November 11, 2022, FTX filed for bankruptcy. Solana's TVL evaporated by over 75% in a week, and the price of SOL plummeted from $32 to $8. The entire crypto circle's OS: "Solana is finished."

The beginnings of these two stories are strikingly similar: a small entity abandoned, struggling to survive in a hostile environment. And the paths they later took—from dependence, to survival, to transformation and upgrading—can almost be compared frame by frame.

This article does not aim to discuss price or community, but a more fundamental question: operating a public blockchain is essentially governing a digital country. Tokens are currency, developers are citizens, DApps are industries, and on-chain governance is the government. If we reexamine Solana's development history from the perspective of governance, many seemingly accidental decisions have clear logic behind them.

Chapter 1: The British Military Era—SBF and FTX's Umbrella

Singapore's British Military Economy

In the early days of independence, one of Singapore's economic lifelines was the consumption and employment brought by the British garrison. The British military bases contributed about 20% of the GDP at the time. Singapore was not unaware of the fragility of this dependence, but for a newborn country, there was no qualification to pick and choose clients. Survival was the top priority.

In 1968, Britain announced that it would withdraw all its forces east of the Suez Canal by 1971. This was tantamount to pulling the rug out from under Singapore. But it was this "abandonment" that forced Singapore to seriously consider: if the protective umbrella is gone, what do I rely on to survive?

Solana's SBF Era (2020-2022)

The Solana mainnet launched in March 2020, but what truly made it stand out among the many "Ethereum killers" was Sam Bankman-Fried and his empire. FTX and Alameda Research were not only the largest sources of capital injection into the Solana ecosystem but also its credit endorsers. Early core ecosystem projects like Serum, Raydium, and Maps.me almost all had deep involvement from FTX-related capital.

The Solana ecosystem during this period was very much like Singapore during the British military presence: superficially prosperous, with good-looking data (TVL once exceeded $12 billion), but the foundation was fragile. A large amount of on-chain activity came from Alameda's market-making funds circulating within the ecosystem; the real organic demand was far less healthy than the data suggested.

Singapore relied on British military consumption; Solana relied on SBF's capital. The common feature of both is: the prosperity was real, but its source was exogenous, concentrated, and could disappear at any time.

The Collapse of the Umbrella

In November 2022, FTX went from the world's second-largest exchange to a pile of ruins in 72 hours. The impact on Solana was systemic: Serum's governance keys were controlled by FTX, paralyzing the project; treasury assets of numerous ecosystem projects were frozen within FTX; the high concentration of SOL staking was exposed; market confidence plummeted to zero, and developers began to leave.

This was Solana's "1968 moment." The protective umbrella wasn't slowly withdrawn; it was blown up overnight.

Chapter 2: How a Small Country Without Resources Survives—Solana's Underlying Endowments

Singapore's "Only Resource": Geographic Location

Singapore has no oil, no minerals, not even fresh water—it has to be imported from Malaysia. But it has one thing given by nature: the strategic location of the Strait of Malacca. About 25% of global maritime trade passes through here. Lee Kuan Yew figured out one thing early on: I don't need to have resources; I just need to be the best node for the flow of resources.

Solana's "Only Resource": Performance and Cabal

In the world of public blockchains, Solana also lacks Ethereum's first-mover advantage, Bitcoin's narrative myth, and Cosmos's modular flexibility. But it has one thing: extreme performance at the native layer. 400-millisecond block times, a theoretical peak of 65,000 TPS, and extremely low transaction fees (typically below $0.001).

This is not an optional technical parameter. Just as the geographic location of the Strait of Malacca determined that Singapore could become a trade hub, Solana's performance characteristics determine that it is naturally suited to carry high-frequency, small-amount, massive on-chain activities.

Geographic location is to Singapore what block speed and transaction cost are to Solana: this is the entry ticket that makes the cabal willing to come here to compete.

Chapter 3: The Wisdom of Survival in the Gray Zone—From Money Laundering Hub to Meme Casino

Singapore's "Less Glorious" Intermediate Stage

This is a period of history often glossed over in Singapore's official narrative. During the rapid development period from the 1970s to the 1990s, Singapore became a regional financial center not entirely due to its "clean and efficient" reputation.

A harsh reality is: in Southeast Asia during that era, surrounding countries—Suharto's regime in Indonesia, the Marcos family in the Philippines, the military junta in Myanmar—generated a large amount of funds that needed "cleaning." These funds needed a safe,不问来路的 (doesn't ask about the origin), predictable legal system to park. Singapore恰好提供了这样的环境: strict bank secrecy laws, efficient financial infrastructure, and an unspoken pragmatic attitude of "as long as you follow my rules, I won't追究你的钱从哪来 (pursue where your money came from)."

Business has no moral judgment, only survival strategies. A small country without resources, in its initial stages, must accept some "imperfect money" to accumulate sufficient capital stock for future transformation.

The key is: Singapore never let things slide. While attracting funds, it always maintained extremely high administrative efficiency and legal certainty (Temasek and GIC are among the world's top 10 sovereign wealth funds). You can bring gray money, but you can't cause trouble in my territory. This "orderly gray" is an extremely delicate balancing act.

Solana's Meme Season and Pump.fun (2023-2024)

After the FTX collapse, Solana faced survival pressure no less than Singapore in its early days of independence. TVL dried up, developers left, the narrative collapsed. What it needed at this time was not "correct" growth, but "any form of" growth—survive first.

From late 2023 to 2024, the Meme wave swept Solana. The emergence of Pump.fun lowered the barrier to Meme issuance to almost zero: anyone could create a token in minutes, no code, no audit needed. The wealth creation myths of Memes like BONK, WIF, and BOME attracted a flood of speculative funds.

From the perspective of traditional finance or technological fundamentalism, this was simply a disaster. The Solana chain was filled with Rug Pulls (project founders absconding), Sniper Bots (front-running bots), and countless zero-value shitcoins. But if you understand it through the framework of Singapore's history, you find it strikingly similar and full of rationality:

Meme is to Solana what gray funds were to early Singapore—it can't make it onto the big stage of tech geeks, but it brings three key things:

  • Capital inflow (foreign exchange reserves): Meme trading brought massive on-chain transaction volume and fee income, directly enriching the validators' economic model and stabilizing the basic operation of the network.

  • User base (population): Millions of new users touched a Solana wallet (Phantom's downloads soared during this period) for the first time, even if they initially came to gamble.

  • Infrastructure stress testing (urban construction): The extreme transaction load during Meme peaks exposed the real bottlenecks of the Solana network, forcing the accelerated development of key infrastructure like the Firedancer client.

Singapore's wisdom lies not in "accepting gray funds," but in "never stopping the construction of正规的制度基础设施 (formal institutional infrastructure) while accepting gray funds." Similarly, the key for Solana is not the Meme itself, but whether it is simultaneously advancing truly valuable underlying construction under the cover of the Meme frenzy.

Chapter 4: Currency as Sovereignty—The Governance Logic of Token Economics

Singapore's Monetary Policy Philosophy

The monetary policy of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) is unique among global central banks: it does not use interest rates as the primary tool but manages the Singapore dollar's exchange rate fluctuation band to regulate the economy. An appreciation channel is used to curb inflation and attract capital; a depreciation channel is used to stimulate exports and maintain competitiveness.

The core logic is: currency is not static; it must be dynamic and responsive. How much money to print, whether to appreciate or depreciate the currency, depends on the needs of the current economic cycle. Excessive issuance dilutes national wealth and causes inflation; excessive tightening stifles economic vitality. Good monetary policy is a continuous balancing act.

SOL's Token Economics: The Dynamic Game from Inflation to Deflation

Solana's token economics have undergone a similar evolution.

Initial Inflation Phase (Quantitative Easing): At the launch of the Solana mainnet, an annual inflation rate of about 8% was set, decreasing by 15% each year, with a long-term target converging to 1.5%. These newly issued SOLs were used to pay staking rewards, essentially a "fiscal expenditure" subsidizing validators—just like emerging countries investing heavily in infrastructure early on, you must first pay the cost to attract "citizens" (validators) to stay and maintain network security.

Introduction of Burn Mechanism (Tightening Policy): In 2023, Solana introduced a partial burn mechanism for transaction fees—50% of the base fee of each transaction is permanently burned. When on-chain activity is sufficiently active, the amount of SOL burned may approach or even exceed the amount of new issuance, putting SOL into a de facto deflationary state.

This is like a country's central bank finally having the ability to "raise interest rates": when the economy (on-chain activity) is prosperous enough, it recovers money supply to maintain currency value.

But the problem is: Solana currently lacks a truly dynamic, responsive monetary policy framework. Its inflation rate decreases mechanically according to a preset curve, and the burn rate depends entirely on market activity; there is no "smart adjustment mechanism" like the MAS between the two.

This is a deep governance problem that Solana (and almost all public blockchains) has not yet solved: the issuance and burning of tokens should not be a fixed curve but should be dynamically adjusted according to the network's "economic cycle," like the monetary policy of a sovereign state. When the network is congested (economic overheating), the fee burn ratio should be increased to抑制投机 (suppress speculation); when the network is quiet (economic recession), perhaps the staking门槛 (threshold) for validators should be lowered and incentives increased.

A truly mature public blockchain economy needs not an inflation curve written dead in the code, but a set of on-chain "central bank" governance mechanisms.

only few understand, tokens do not only appreciate by being burned.

Chapter 5: HDB Politics—"People with Assets Will Defend the Country"

The Real Crisis in Early Singapore: Not Poverty, but the Sense of Division Between Ethnic Groups

When most people talk about the Singapore miracle, they focus on economic growth. But Lee Kuan Yew himself repeatedly emphasized that the most dangerous enemy in the early days of nation-building was not poverty, but racial division.

In 1965, Singapore's population was roughly 75% Chinese, 15% Malay, and 7% Indian. The three ethnic groups spoke different languages, had different beliefs, and distrusted each other. One of the triggers for Singapore's expulsion from the Malaysian Federation was the irreconcilable racial矛盾 (contradictions) between Chinese and Malays—in the 1964 racial riots, 23 people died and hundreds were injured.

After independence, Singapore faced a残酷的现实 (harsh reality): the people on this island did not feel like "Singaporeans" at all. The Chinese identified with Chinese culture, the Malays with the Malay Federation, the Indians with India. No one had a sense of belonging to the concept of "Singapore," let alone was willing to sacrifice for it.

The fundamental problem Lee Kuan Yew needed to solve was: How to make a group of people who distrust each other voluntarily stay under the same roof and be willing to付出 (give) to maintain that roof?

HDB: Not Just Housing, but a National Binding Mechanism

The answer was HDB public housing—perhaps one of the most ingenious social engineering projects in human history.

On the surface, HDB solved the housing problem. In the 1960s, a large population in Singapore lived in squatter settlements and slums. The government built public housing on a large scale, selling it to citizens at prices far below market rates and allowing the use of the Central Provident Fund (CPF) to pay mortgages. Today, over 80% of Singaporeans live in HDB flats.

But the true genius of HDB lies in its underlying political logic. Lee Kuan Yew once said a very frank sentence (paraphrased): "A person who owns assets in a place is more willing to defend it."

The HDB system achieved at least three strategic goals simultaneously:

First, creating "stakeholders." When you are just a tenant, the rise and fall of the city have little to do with you—you can just move away. But when you own a house, your net worth is tied to the fate of the country. Housing prices rise, your net assets rise; the country falls into chaos, your assets shrink. Every HDB owner becomes a "shareholder" in Singapore's national fortune.

Second,强制种族融合 (forced racial integration). This is the most underestimated design of the HDB system. HDB implements a strict Ethnic Integration Policy (EIP): each HDB community has quotas for the proportion of Chinese, Malays, and Indians, ensuring that no single-ethnic enclaves form. Your neighbors are necessarily different from you. Children play together downstairs, attend the same schools. After a generation, racial barriers were slowly dissolved by the forced mixing of physical space.

Third, linking personal wealth to the quality of national governance. The appreciation of HDB flats depends on Singapore's continued prosperity and good governance. Good governance leads to area development and improved amenities, which升值 (appreciates) your flat. This creates a powerful positive feedback loop: citizens have an incentive to support good governance because good governance directly enhances their asset values.

A single HDB flat accomplishes three tasks simultaneously: "binding interests—eliminating divisions—incentivizing governance." This is not just housing policy; it is the cornerstone of the nation. To secure the outside, one must first secure the inside—Lee Kuan Yew understood this deeply.

Solana's "Race Problem": A Divided Community

Switching perspectives back to Solana. After the FTX collapse, the Solana community faced a degree of fragmentation no less than that of Singapore in 1965.

There are at least three "ethnic groups" on the chain with截然不同 (distinctly different) interests:

Speculative traders and Meme players. They are the largest contributors to on-chain activity on Solana, bringing transaction volume, fees, and话题热度 (topic heat). But they have no loyalty to Solana; they go to whichever chain has the hype, essentially a floating population.

Native developers and builders. They have invested significant time and technical capital in building DeFi protocols, infrastructure tools, and DePIN projects on Solana. Their relationship with Meme speculators is微妙而紧张 (subtle and tense)—they need them (users and流量 (traffic)) but also dislike them (lowering the ecosystem's seriousness).

Validators and stakers. They are the cornerstone of network security, investing real money in hardware and staking capital. They care about network stability, staking yields, and the long-term value of SOL, neither participating in nor caring about short-term speculation.

The competitive tension between these three groups is divisive. Meme players complain about the unfairness of the priority queue for retail users during network congestion; developers complain that Memes吸走了 (suck away) all the attention and funds; validators complain about the opacity of the MEV distribution mechanism. Without a mechanism to align the interests of these three parties, the centrifugal force within the Solana community will only grow.

Where is Solana's "HDB"?

Lee Kuan Yew's wisdom—making citizens hold assets, binding personal interests to collective fate—what启示 (enlightenment) does it offer for Solana? Some mechanisms similar to "HDB" already exist in the Solana ecosystem, but they are far from systematic:

The Staking mechanism is the design closest to "HDB." When you stake SOL, you lock your assets into the network, and your收益 (returns) directly depend on the network's health. Stakers naturally become "shareholders" in network security. But currently, Solana's staking is mainly concentrated in the hands of large holders and institutions; the participation rate and sense of participation of ordinary users are insufficient—this is like if HDB flats were only sold to the rich, the poor would still be tenants, and the effect of "interest binding" would be greatly reduced.

Governance tokens and airdrops are a form of "house distribution." Ecosystem projects airdropping governance tokens (like JTO, JUP airdrops) to early users and developers are essentially "distributing assets"—turning participants from bystanders into stakeholders. Jupiter's JUP token airdrop covered nearly a million active wallets, instantly creating a large number of "homeowners" with a sense of belonging to the Jupiter protocol. If designed properly, this mechanism is no less effective than HDB.

Superteam DAO's globalized community is an attempt at "ethnic integration." Superteam establishes localized communities in different countries and regions, allowing developers from India, content creators from Turkey, and DeFi users from Nigeria to collaborate within the same organizational framework. This is somewhat like HDB's ethnic quota system—reducing cliques and factionalization through structured mixing.

But what Solana still lacks is a truly systematic "asset binding—interest alignment" mechanism. Imagine a more complete version: if the Solana ecosystem could establish a system where developers receive continuous protocol-layer revenue sharing for deploying successful applications on the chain; where active users accumulate some non-transferable "on-chain credit" or "citizenship" through long-term use; where validators' rewards are linked to the reliability of their service and their contribution to decentralization—then the personal wealth of every participant would be tightly bound to Solana's overall prosperity.

When speculators, developers, and validators all become "homeowners," not just "tenants," they will truly be willing to fight for the long-term interests of this chain. This is the most profound lesson Lee Kuan Yew taught us with an HDB flat: people won't fight for abstract ideals, but they will fight desperately for their own assets.

Chapter 6: The Crossroads of Transformation—"What Comes After?"

Singapore's Three Leaps

Singapore's economic transformation can be roughly divided into three stages:

First Stage (1960s-1970s): Labor-intensive manufacturing. Utilized low-cost labor to attract multinational companies to set up factories, earning foreign exchange and solving employment. This was the "survival" stage.

Second Stage (1980s-1990s): Financial and trade hub. Utilized geographic location and institutional advantages to become a regional capital distribution center and shipping logistics hub. Gray funds played a non-negligible role in this stage. This was the "gaining a foothold" stage.

Third Stage (2000s-present): Knowledge economy and high-end manufacturing. Heavily invested in education, attracted talent (Global Talent Program), developed high-value-added industries like biomedicine, semiconductor design, and fintech. Simultaneously tightened anti-money laundering regulations, gradually "cleaning" the financial system. This is the "defining itself" stage.

Each leap did not happen naturally; it was an active transition to a new model before the profits of the old model were exhausted. This requires极强的战略定力和政治意志 (extremely strong strategic determination and political will)—because transformation means主动放弃 (actively giving up) part of the current benefits.

Solana's Current Position: The End of the Second Stage

Using Singapore's framework for定位 (positioning), Solana is currently in the middle to late second stage. The capital and user红利 (dividends) brought by the Meme wave still exist, but the marginal effects have begun to diminish. Market fatigue with the next 100x Meme is rising, and if Solana cannot complete its transformation before this wave of heat subsides, it risks becoming a "casino chain"—just as if Singapore had remained stuck in the gray finance stage, it might be just another Cayman Islands today.

What Could Solana's Third Stage Be?

I don't know either, but it's definitely not some AI Agent.

Conclusion: The Fate of Public Blockchains is Ultimately the Fate of Governance

Looking back at Singapore's story, its success was not due to luck but because at every critical juncture, it made counterintuitive yet logical and commonsense decisions: opening up when it should (even accepting gray funds), controlling when it should (maintaining order with strict laws and harsh punishments), and transforming when it should (even if it meant sacrificing current benefits).

Solana stands at a similar crossroads. The Meme热潮 (craze) has given it life-sustaining ammunition and an active user base, but if it cannot accomplish three things before this红利 (dividend) subsides—establish a dynamic token economic governance mechanism, achieve true decentralization to win institutional trust, and cultivate a core industrial ecosystem beyond Memes—then it could be like countless small countries in history that "almost succeeded," hesitating at the window of transformation and ultimately being淘汰 (eliminated) by the times.

The competition among public blockchains is about narrative in the short term, technology in the medium term, and governance in the long term.

A token is not just a price symbol; it is the currency of a digital nation. And monetary policy has never been a dead written curve but an art of balance, timing, and restraint.

Postscript:

This article uses Singapore's development history as an analogical framework to analyze the Solana public blockchain ecosystem, aiming to provide a new perspective for thinking about public blockchain governance. The historical narrative of Singapore has been simplified to serve the analogical logic and does not constitute a comprehensive evaluation of Singapore's policies.

Also, you ask if the same comparison framework can be used for other public blockchains, sure, why not?

相關問答

QWhat is the core analogy used in the article to analyze the Solana ecosystem, and why is it considered appropriate?

AThe article uses the analogy of 'governing a digital nation' to analyze Solana, comparing it to Singapore's historical development. It is considered appropriate because both Solana and Singapore started from a position of vulnerability, relied on external support for initial growth (SBF/FTX for Solana, British military for Singapore), navigated through a 'gray' phase for survival (Meme coins for Solana, certain financial flows for Singapore), and now face a critical juncture where they must transition to a more mature, sustainable, and value-driven model to ensure long-term success.

QAccording to the article, what was the '1968 moment' for Singapore and the equivalent 'FTX moment' for Solana?

AFor Singapore, the '1968 moment' was when Britain announced the withdrawal of all its military forces east of the Suez Canal by 1971, which removed a crucial pillar (20% of GDP) of Singapore's economy and forced it to find a new path for survival. For Solana, the equivalent 'FTX moment' was in November 2022 when the FTX exchange collapsed. This event caused Solana's TVL to drop over 75%, its token price to crash, and key ecosystem projects to fail, instantly removing its primary source of external capital and credibility.

QWhat role did 'gray areas' play in the development of both Singapore and Solana, as described in the article?

AFor Singapore, 'gray areas' referred to its pragmatic acceptance of certain financial flows in its early development as a regional financial hub. It provided a safe, predictable legal environment for capital from surrounding regions, which helped it accumulate the necessary reserves to fund its future transformation. For Solana, the 'gray area' was the Meme coin frenzy on platforms like Pump.fun. While often seen as speculative and chaotic, this phase brought crucial capital inflow, a massive new user base, and stress-tested the network's infrastructure, providing the resources and data needed for its ongoing development.

QHow does the article compare Singapore's Housing Development Board (HDB) policy to a potential mechanism for Solana?

AThe article compares Singapore's HDB policy, which created a nation of 'stakeholders' by giving citizens' personal wealth a direct stake in the country's success, to the need for a similar 'asset-binding' mechanism in the Solana ecosystem. It suggests that mechanisms like staking SOL, airdropping governance tokens to active users, and building global communities (e.g., Superteam DAO) are initial steps. However, it argues Solana needs a more systematic mechanism to align the interests of its diverse 'tribes' (speculators, developers, validators) by making them 'owners' with a vested interest in the long-term health and prosperity of the network, rather than just temporary 'tenants'.

QWhat is the article's conclusion about the most critical factor for the long-term success of a blockchain like Solana?

AThe article concludes that while short-term success depends on narrative and mid-term success on technology, the long-term success of a blockchain like Solana ultimately depends on governance. It emphasizes that a token is the currency of a digital nation, and its monetary policy cannot be a fixed, pre-set curve. Instead, it must be a dynamic, responsive art of balance, timing, and restraint—similar to how a sovereign nation's central bank manages its economy—to navigate different cycles and ensure sustainable growth.

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什麼是 SOLANA

HarryPotterWifHatMyroWynn10Inu,$solana: 一窺這個潮流迷因幣項目 介紹 在不斷演變的加密貨幣世界中,創新的項目層出不窮,吸引著投資者和愛好者的想像。其中一個項目是 HarryPotterWifHatMyroWynn10Inu,$solana,一個已經開始在加密社區中佔有一席之地的迷因幣。本文章旨在為您提供有關該項目的全面概述,闡明其目的、架構、創建者、投資者以及在發展過程中的重要里程碑。 什麼是 HarryPotterWifHatMyroWynn10Inu,$solana? 概述 HarryPotterWifHatMyroWynn10Inu,$solana 是一個基於 Solana 區塊鏈的迷因幣項目—這是一個以其擴展性和速度而著稱的平台。該項目旨在為加密空間帶來快樂和創意,不僅作為交易代幣,還作為生成和分享迷因內容的催化劑。其核心的社區受到鼓勵參與,提供一個動態生態系統,在這裡創造力和協作得以蓬勃發展。 目標和宗旨 該項目的本質是培養一個讓迷因愛好者聚集、分享和創作新穎迷因內容的環境。這種以敘事為驅動的方式在社區中注入了興奮感,推動了參與,同時展示了 Solana 區塊鏈內在的強大功能。通過建立一個以社區為中心的項目,HarryPotterWifHatMyroWynn10Inu,$solana 亦希望探討數字貨幣作為表達手段的社會影響。 HarryPotterWifHatMyroWynn10Inu,$solana 的創建者是誰? HarryPotterWifHatMyroWynn10Inu,$solana 的創建者身份仍然神秘莫測。該項目的結構是以放棄所有權的方式設計的,因此它作為一個由社區主導的倡議蓬勃發展。這種去中心化促進了所有利益相關者之間的透明性和民主參與。在迷因幣的世界中,這種方法越來越受歡迎,因為社區參與是至高無上的。 HarryPotterWifHatMyroWynn10Inu,$solana 的投資者是誰? 截至目前,沒有公開可得的關於支持 HarryPotterWifHatMyroWynn10Inu,$solana 的具體投資者或基金會的信息。知名投資者的缺席進一步強調了該項目的以社區為導向的精神,它獨立於傳統金融框架。這種獨立性使項目能夠在沒有外部壓力的情況下發展其身份,而是依賴於用戶基礎的集體興趣。 HarryPotterWifHatMyroWynn10Inu,$solana 如何運作? 經濟模型 該項目采用了一種獨特的經濟模型,支撐其功能性和用戶參與。HarryPotterWifHatMyroWynn10Inu,$solana 內部的交易旨在對所有參與方都有益。每一筆交易都會收取費用,這些費用隨後會在現有持有者中重新分配,同時增強流動性池。 這一模型的關鍵組成部分包括: 反射機制:交易費用的一部分會返回給持有者,促進對代幣的長期投資。 流動性池獲取:資金被分配以增強流動性,確保買賣操作可以順利執行。 燒毀機制:部分代幣可能會被燒毀以創造稀缺性,隨著需求的上升可能會增加價值。 這種設計鼓勵了一個自我維持的生態系統,在這裡社區互動和投資得以繁榮。 社區參與 HarryPotterWifHatMyroWynn10Inu,$solana 的核心價值在於社區參與。通過使用戶能夠通過創作迷因和促銷等各種活動參與項目的發展,該項目培育了一個充滿活力的生態系統,讓創造力得以蓬勃發展。 HarryPotterWifHatMyroWynn10Inu,$solana 的時間軸 HarryPotterWifHatMyroWynn10Inu,$solana 的發展軌跡上有多個值得注意的事件,塑造了它在加密社區中的當前地位: 創建:具體的創建日期仍未披露,但該項目的起源植根於貫穿數位時代的迷因文化之中。 社區接管:在創建者放棄所有權後,該項目過渡為由社區主導的模式,讓所有參與者都有份於它的成功。 審計和 NFT 收藏:為了增強可信度,該項目完成了一次徹底的審計,同時推出了一個 NFT 收藏,體現其以迷因為中心的精神。 夥伴關係和發展:該項目目前正在尋找潛在的夥伴關係,並組織基於其傳奇迷因的獨特網站和商品選項的發展。 要點 總結而言,HarryPotterWifHatMyroWynn10Inu,$solana 在加密貨幣的迷因幣領域中是一個值得注意的參與者。以下是一些關鍵要點: 社區主導的倡議:該項目作為一項合作努力蓬勃發展,鼓勵社區成員積極貢獻,同時與所有權聲索分離。 創新的經濟模型:利用反射、流動性獲取和燒毀機制,為用戶創建一個強大而引人入勝的財務環境。 NFT 和商品參與:通過推出 NFT 收藏,該項目旨在深化社區參與,強化迷因文化與數字貨幣之間的聯繫。 探索夥伴關係:該倡議並非靜止不前—持續的發展和潛在的夥伴關係表明了一種面向未來的增長取向。 結論 隨著 HarryPotterWifHatMyroWynn10Inu,$solana 在加密貨幣領域中不斷擴展,其獨特的社區參與、創新經濟結構以及迷因文化的融合勾勒出其未來的潛在路徑。即使其起源和投資者關係仍帶有神秘色彩,該項目卻講述了一個富有魅力的故事,體現去中心化創新的本質。在一個加密貨幣往往被視為純金融視角的世界中,HarryPotterWifHatMyroWynn10Inu,$solana 展示了加密運動融合了創造力、社區和合作的特性。無論您是經驗豐富的投資者還是新手,這個迷因幣項目的發展過程無疑是一個值得關注的迷人案例。

694 人學過發佈於 2024.04.04更新於 2024.12.03

什麼是 SOLANA

什麼是 SOLANA 2.0

BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu, $SOLANA 2.0:加密貨幣界的新玩家 BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu, $SOLANA 2.0 介紹 在不斷演變的加密貨幣市場中,新興項目不斷吸引著投資者和愛好者的注意。在這些新興項目中,有一個名為BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu,以加密貨幣符號$SOLANA 2.0代表。這個獨特的計劃結合了魅力、冒險和迷因文化的元素,旨在在高度競爭的領域中挑戰預期。這個項目抱有增長和創新的願景,捕捉到一種努力對抗已建立的巨頭的精神。 BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu, $SOLANA 2.0 是什麼? 在其核心,BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu是一個受到多種標誌性文化參考啟發的加密貨幣項目。它包括與Barbie相關的優雅和魅力,Crash Bandicoot的動感能量,以及RFK所代表的堅韌驅動,該項目的目標是在加密貨幣的世界中提供多面化的體驗。 BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu項目的主要目標是將這些不同的元素融合成一個吸引廣泛受眾的凝聚生態系統。通過擁抱迷因文化的奇想,同時堅守去中心化和財務賦權的原則,該項目已定位為對於成熟投資者和加密世界的新手都具有吸引力的選擇。 BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu, $SOLANA 2.0 的創造者是誰? 儘管對BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu的關注不斷增長,關於其創造者的信息仍然 largely未知。創始人或開發團隊的匿名性引發了對項目結構和治理的疑問。在加密貨幣的世界中,項目沒有公開創始人是很常見的。這一缺乏信息可能會使某些潛在投資者卻步,而其他人則可能將其視為擁抱許多加密貨幣項目所基礎的去中心化精神的機會。 BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu, $SOLANA 2.0 的投資者是誰? 目前,關於支持BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu的投資基金或機構的信息相對較少。項目缺乏詳細的投資支持突顯了許多加密貨幣的獨立性。在這種情況下,項目的資金是否來自基層社群的支持或更大金融實體的支持,仍有待觀察。 BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu, $SOLANA 2.0 如何運作? BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu設計了多項功能,使其在擁擠的加密空間中獨具一格。雖然具體的技術細節仍然保密,但該項目預計將融入旨在增強用戶參與度和促進社區增長的功能。從時尚和冒險到遊戲的多樣影響力的結合,促進了一種迎合多樣興趣的包容氛圍。 此外,該項目與$SOLANA 2.0生態系統的聯繫暗示著潛在的技術優勢。這可能包括創新的交易速度、可擴展性和成本效益,與Solana區塊鏈的技術能力相一致。項目的創始人似乎正在依靠這一技術基礎,以創建持久的社區體驗和實質性的產品供應。 BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu, $SOLANA 2.0 的時間表 BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu的旅程包含幾個關鍵里程碑,提供了該項目迄今為止的發展見解: 項目概念化:最初的想法圍繞著魅力、冒險和迷因文化的融合,為項目的獨特概念提供了框架。 代幣創建:象徵性的$SOLANA 2.0代幣建立,旨在體現項目的願景並吸引潛在投資者的興趣。 項目開發:目前,該項目正進行進一步開發,重點是挑戰加密空間中的現有玩家並提供創新的產品。 這些里程碑反映了項目的增長軌跡,同時突顯了其致力於開發一個開創性的加密貨幣體驗的承諾。 關於BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu, $SOLANA 2.0 的要點 獨特概念:BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu通過將魅力、冒險和迷因文化的元素融合到一個加密貨幣項目中而脫穎而出。 弱者精神:該項目擁抱弱者的角色,旨在挑戰現有的加密貨幣項目並在行業中開闢一塊市場。 開發階段:正在進行積極的開發工作,旨在提供符合社區和投資者期望的新鮮和創新的產品。 結論 BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu,以符號$SOLANA 2.0呈現,是加密貨幣市場中一個引人入勝的新進者。其獨特的文化參考混合和雄心勃勃的願景,可能引起尋求在加密領域尋找替代項目價值的人的共鳴。 雖然創始人和投資者的未知狀態可能會引發疑問,但該項目對魅力和冒險的重視展現了擴展加密貨幣可能體現的界限的迷人敘事。隨著項目的持續發展,觀察其在更廣泛的加密市場中的演變及其如何在競爭對手中定位自己,將會非常有趣。對於那些參與者來說,BarbieCrashBandicootRFK777Inu可能會解鎖重新定義與數字資產互動的驚喜體驗。 目前,隨著項目的推進,其旅程提醒著我們,加密空間的創新沒有界限,提供了一切從興奮和娛樂到財務賦權的潛力。

134 人學過發佈於 2024.04.05更新於 2024.12.03

什麼是 SOLANA 2.0

如何購買SOL

歡迎來到HTX.com!在這裡,購買Solana (SOL)變得簡單而便捷。跟隨我們的逐步指南,放心開始您的加密貨幣之旅。第一步:創建您的HTX帳戶使用您的 Email、手機號碼在HTX註冊一個免費帳戶。體驗無憂的註冊過程並解鎖所有平台功能。立即註冊第二步:前往買幣頁面,選擇您的支付方式信用卡/金融卡購買:使用您的Visa或Mastercard即時購買Solana (SOL)。餘額購買:使用您HTX帳戶餘額中的資金進行無縫交易。第三方購買:探索諸如Google Pay或Apple Pay等流行支付方式以增加便利性。C2C購買:在HTX平台上直接與其他用戶交易。HTX 場外交易 (OTC) 購買:為大量交易者提供個性化服務和競爭性匯率。第三步:存儲您的Solana (SOL)購買Solana (SOL)後,將其存儲在您的HTX帳戶中。您也可以透過區塊鏈轉帳將其發送到其他地址或者用於交易其他加密貨幣。第四步:交易Solana (SOL)在HTX的現貨市場輕鬆交易Solana (SOL)。前往您的帳戶,選擇交易對,執行交易,並即時監控。HTX為初學者和經驗豐富的交易者提供了友好的用戶體驗。

2.0k 人學過發佈於 2024.12.12更新於 2025.03.21

如何購買SOL

相關討論

歡迎來到 HTX 社群。在這裡,您可以了解最新的平台發展動態並獲得專業的市場意見。 以下是用戶對 SOL (SOL)幣價的意見。

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