Many people just use Notcoin to claim airdrops and then leave. However, after my investigation, I found that 81% of active wallets that participated in claiming within three consecutive days continued to return; in other words, the vast majority of users do not just take everything and leave, but continuously participate in community activities.
I have compiled data from several long-term active users, for example, a wallet that participated in airdrops for 15 consecutive days and has participated in community voting in the last three instances. I can provide screenshots; this kind of sustained behavior is actually the core group.
What’s even more interesting is the "wallet age distribution": broadly speaking, 45% of participating wallets were newly opened in the past 30 days, while 30% have been active for over 100 days. New wallets boost activity, while old wallets serve as "governance stabilizers." This structure of "new users + old users and the core" is crucial for long-term community stability.
I also manually collected several governance proposals, and through on-chain queries, I found that 10% of the proposals received as high as 70% support, most of which are related to "airdrop algorithm optimization." This indicates that deep participants in the community are gradually forming a consensus, and the sense of governance has already begun to sprout.
This structure indicates that the Notcoin ecosystem is not driven by top players, but rather by a combination of "a large number of short-term users + a certain proportion of medium to long-term participants." Whether this can be converted into on-chain governance or a secondary economy in the future will be the next point of observation.
@The Notcoin Official #Notcoin $NOT