Tokens and Issuance: The Role, Supply, and Listing Trends of PROVE

PROVE is designed as a payment and security token within the network: requesters buy proofs with PROVE, provers receive PROVE as a reward, and token holders can also support provers through staking and share in the profits. The project was accompanied by an airdrop and exchange listing during its mainnet launch, with public information showing a total supply of 1,000,000,000 PROVE, and initial circulation and HODL airdrop details set at the time of listing (Binance announcements listed the details of the airdrop and circulation ratios). These token economic arrangements directly affect liquidity and price fluctuations in the short to medium term.

In reality, infrastructure tokens like PROVE, which serve both as payment and staking tokens, often face two types of market pressures: first, the sales pressure for payments (demand is generated by using tokens to buy services); second, the selling pressure from early airdrops/unlocks. Recently, the market's reaction to PROVE has shown significant volatility—after launching, fluctuations and exchange liquidity events remind participants to pay attention to the unlocking schedule and market depth.

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