@biancataina29 He did call it a ghost chain indirectly. He said every crypto is a ghost chain apart from a few that have found product market fit, which Kaspa has yet to do
13/13
Q: If you had to name three things that need to happen in the next 12 months for Kaspa adoption to be considered "real" — not by you, but by an outside skeptic — what are they?
A: This question should be directed at crypto more broadly, not just Kaspa.
One thing that must happen for crypto adoption to be considered real is renewed capital interest in using crypto platforms en masse. When it happens, you’ll know immediately — it will be visible in clear on-chain metrics.
In fact, Kaspa is not lagging far behind the rest of crypto in terms of adoption. Only a handful of projects have found product-market fit; the rest are ghost chains fueled by synthetic activity.
This is not to say adoption shouldn’t be our top priority — just putting things in perspective.
@DaWhiteRhino@DesheShai Calling out the flaws of a project I’m invested in shows I’m not blinded by bias
If I only offered praise for every aspect of Kaspa, I’d be a fool
@TxLegendGaming “Only a handful of projects have found product-market fit; the rest are ghost chains fueled by synthetic activity.”
He obviously doesn’t consider Kaspa to be one of the few that has found its product market fit, meaning Kaspa is a ghost chain
@kaspabitcon Kaspa is not a scam. Anyone who participated in the network did so voluntarily
The only founder is yonatan and I don’t think he’s necessarily backing away
The developers are still working tirelessly and put forth more meaningful R&D than 99% of other projects
4/13
Q: Marketing is a sensitive topic in the Kaspa community. Some argue Kaspa as a project needs a coordinated, top-down marketing push to compete with chains that spend heavily on visibility. Others believe each project building on Kaspa should run their own marketing, and adoption will follow organically from that. Where do you stand?
A: Marketing and narrative-setting are top-down: founders/builders set the narrative and connect it to the roadmap. The community is the voice amplifier — it gives flavor and defines the tone and soul of the project. (Do not conflate “top-down” with “official”; that is not implied.)
Marketing is a story hook. You catch someone’s interest, but then they want to do something with it. If you have no product or interesting on-chain activity, you’ve wasted the hook and their curiosity fades. Therefore, 90% of efforts should go toward accelerating product development.
Marketing in this bear market and in general when there’s little market attention and capital flow is a waste of money and effort, it’s what Wolfie @Kaspa_HypeMan describes as swimming against a riptide.
@DreamSequencing “Only a handful of projects have found product-market fit; the rest are ghost chains fueled by synthetic activity.”
If kaspa had found product-market fit, it would already be adopted
@DonNguyen270923 Finality isn’t the best measure of speed
If you send KAS to someone, it will arrive in their wallet instantly
Kaspa’s block production is also the fastest
Many $KAS holders are claiming that it has finality time under 1 second
I want to clear up any confusion and stop the spread of misinformation
While Kaspa is incredibly fast, final settlement is not the same as confirmation time
Confirmation time: How quickly your transaction is included in a block
Finality: How long it takes for the transaction to be mathematically irreversible
@Krok13236 Can you estimate Kaspa’s current finality vs confirmation times for the community?