Should we return to our hometown to start a business and promote the毛产业 to drive rural employment?

Verifying faces, scoring deposits, completing task points, no pollution, no energy consumption, no emissions, driving employment in our rural areas!

With families as units and villages as battlefields, this original high-quality industrial development route, should this entrepreneurship be considered a green industry?

In the past few years, we have been collecting airdrops on the chain, relying on interaction, forming real users, and predicting who will issue tokens and when.

But most of the time, we are actually playing a game with an "unknown system" that has no rules, no logic, and ultimately depends on the conscience and pattern of the team.

Now, exchanges have directly turned asset distribution into a productized issuance platform, and project parties are also willing to allocate a large number of tokens to engage (with clear participation logic). This actually reflects a reality,

For project parties, this is a game of resource allocation, and the distribution methods for issuing tokens to on-chain users and exchange users are completely different.

For users, we are beginning to see the "asset issuance rights" shift from protocols to platforms and traffic ends,

Whether this is good or bad mainly depends on the type of "user"; for someone like me who is a kuigas type, it is definitely a bad thing! For exchange users, it is a good thing, and it’s difficult to draw a conclusion as everyone has different perspectives.

This well-known bellyband NFT (Doodles) that has been on CCTV is finally about to issue tokens (TGE). I once accompanied it through ups and downs, buying and selling NFTs, crowdfunding... step by step, watching it grow, and after countless selections, I finally turned into a leftover woman.

Just like a goddess I have accompanied for many years, she is finally going to marry someone else and have children.

Youth has come to this point, and the era of NFTs has ended.

With a glimmer in my eyes, I mutter: who hasn’t been young before?