Kaito has launched its own Launchpad, focusing on the community voting for itself.
The gameplay is also different from before; there’s no need to compete for wallet balances but instead to look at your on-chain interactions, holdings, and social reputation. True participants take priority, while freeloaders should stay aside.
The remaining quota enters the FCFS phase, where it’s all about speed; the fast get rewarded, and the slow miss out. Transaction fees will also be returned to the community through gKAITO, providing real financial rewards.
Moreover, the officials have made it clear: KYC is a regulatory requirement, fully managed by a third-party Persona, and Kaito will not touch your data.
Why is this worth mentioning?
Kaito has already airdropped over 90 million dollars, with over 40,000 token holders and more than 200,000 monthly active users.
The community is established, funds have been distributed, the conversation is buzzing, and now they even have a Launchpad.
If a few viable projects emerge from this, Kaito will no longer just be a project-checking website; it could very well become the next launch site.
In the past, securing whitelist spots was about relationships; now it’s about what you’ve done on-chain and how familiar you are with the community. The rules of the game have changed, and sticking to the old ways will leave you behind.