+1 today 🎉🎈
Alhamdulillah for the gift of life, for the things yet to be and things there's ever been!
omo person just dey grow old o🙂↔️
You could say a wish tho🫶🏾🎂
How will I be farming people when my account is not even monetized.
I have successfully given 7 people base invite codes and I am willing to give more if I get more.
It is hard to get base invite codes perhaps @jessepollak & @0xAneri can help
Keep baseposting
#base#baseapp
Is Monad 100B $MON Supply a Red Flag?
When you hear “100 billion tokens,” it’s easy to think inflation, dilution, or even meme-like tokenomics. Some people have even joked and called it ‘Monad Inu.’
However, in monad’s case, I think this choice is not about memes but about usability and flexibility.
This is just my personal observation, not anything official.
Here's why it makes sense to me:
1. Granularity for fees
With block times at 400ms and massive throughput, monad will process a huge number of micro-transactions.
A large supply ensures fees can stay tiny without creating weird decimals. Think of it like why XRP also chose higher supplies.
2. Unit bias for users
It’s easier for retail users and traders to buy “thousands of MON” rather than fractions like 0.00001.
This helps with accessibility and broader adoption when the chain goes mainstream.
3. Ecosystem scalability
Monad is designed for DeFi, NFTs, gaming, and high-frequency trading. A 100B supply gives enough flexibility for staking, liquidity incentives, validator rewards, and future ecosystem growth without running into scarcity issues.
What It Enhances for Monad:
• Scalability: Large supply fits the high-TPS design and keeps micro-fees workable.
• Adoption: Easier for users to relate to and transact in.
• Sustainability: Long runway for incentives and rewards across the ecosystem.
Bottom Line:
100B MON isn’t something to fear. It’s actually aligned with Monad’s design goals: ultra-fast, ultra-cheap, and built to scale massively.
The real things to watch will be FDV, tokenomics distribution, liquidity and utility.
At the end of the day, supply is just raw numbers. What matters is execution, adoption, and how monad delivers.