One thing that surprises me about crypto:
People are willing to spend months researching a project...
but only a few minutes understanding how the token is actually distributed.
And yet, token distribution often tells you more than the marketing ever will.
It reveals who gets rewarded, who gets diluted,
and who benefits if the ecosystem succeeds.
Those details rarely make headlines.
But they usually shape how a community behaves over the long term.
That's one of the reasons I've been paying attention to @QwertiAI.
Many projects distribute ownership after they've already grown.
Others try to build growth by giving the community a meaningful stake from the beginning.
The difference is bigger than it sounds.
Something I’ve started noticing more in crypto lately:
The projects that survive aren’t always the ones with the biggest launches.
A lot of the time, they’re the ones that quietly keep improving while everyone is distracted by the next narrative.
Better integrations.
Better user flow.
More connected ecosystems.
That progress usually goes unnoticed at first.
Until one day people realize the product has become part of their normal routine.
That’s the stage @QwertiAI feels like it’s moving toward right now.