My experience using @KotoFidotfun is that it feels more like an amplifier than a product itself.


It doesn't attempt to change user behavior but directly leverages existing social habits, reassigning value to actions like liking, sharing, and participating. This design is lightweight but also means it lacks strong constraints.
One thing that can be confirmed is that its core logic is converting attention into distributable incentives. While this isn't new in Web3, its implementation is simpler and more straightforward rather than driven by complex models.
From an industry perspective, such projects are more akin to growth tools rather than long-term infrastructure. Its role is to quickly gather users and attention in the early stages, but whether it can create lasting value depends on whether there are deeper product integrations later on.
The issue is quite practical: without continuous incentives or new use cases, users can easily churn because participation alone doesn't create strong dependency.
On the other hand, if it can iterate on a simple model and find stable retention methods, this lightweight incentive system could become a standard setup for many projects, rather than just a single platform.
@easydotfunX @wallchain #Ad #Affiliate @TermMaxFi
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