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@0xluo.eth
What can we learn from Phaver’s collapse? 1. Tokens and airdrops don’t build lasting communities. Phaver’s airdrop brought short-term hype, but most users were airdrop hunters or bots(many were flagged as spam by Warpcast), not genuine loyal users. and after the TGE, many left and complained as the token crashed. also, listing on CEXs was also costly, funds that could’ve been better spent on product development. Long-term success requires PMF to build a loyal community and effective monetization paths. 2. Grow with the protocol together, not in isolation. Lens has clients like Hey, Orb, and Phaver, but user bases are scattered. Unique, non-interoperable features (like Phaver’s Communities or Orb’s Clubs) created silos. During Phaver’s airdrop, it overlooked many active Lens users outside its own app. Even though it supported both Lens and Farcaster, it failed to build synergy across those communities. Phaver is a cautionary tale for other social products, showing what to do and what to avoid.
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0xLuo
@0xluo.eth
In contrast, Farcaster hasn’t launched a token, so it doesn’t need to worry about token prices. It focuses on building genuine communities and useful features. While there are airdrop incentives, they come from third-party apps, not the core protocol. This has led to a more vibrant and organic ecosystem. Warpcast, as the main client, has taken the lead in driving user growth and pushing protocol development forward. This unified approach helps align product updates with community feedback and accelerates iteration across the board.
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