After the Bittensor Halving, which TAO subnets will truly take off?
This question is highly discussed in the market. Halving usually reshapes market expectations and has a profound impact on capital allocation across different subnets. Historically, halvings tend to trigger two types of changes: first, affecting mining reward models; second, prompting investors to reassess ecological value.
The TAO network's subnet ecosystem itself varies greatly — some focus on AI inference, some on data services, and others on validation layers. When halving approaches, the reward curve will be rewritten, and inefficient subnets may fall behind, while projects with real applications and strong team execution will stand out.
The key is to see who is doing real things: technological iteration, expanding application scenarios, ecological integration. Hype and popularity can't last through the halving cycle. To understand which specific subnets have the most prospects, it depends on team actions and actual market feedback.
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MEVHunter
· 12-14 00:00
The arbitrage opportunities after the halving need to be recalculated. Honestly, those subnets that rely on high gas fees to sustain themselves are directly out. Only those with real use cases can capture the majority of liquidity.
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HashRatePhilosopher
· 12-13 23:53
After the halving, looking at the subnet is like observing people. Those with real skills will naturally endure, while those who boast will eventually be exposed. Projects that only ride the hype are truly waking up this time.
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DarkPoolWatcher
· 12-13 23:45
The halving is basically a knockout tournament start; a bunch of worthless projects are about to be exposed.
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GasGuzzler
· 12-13 23:45
Subnets still hyped after the halving are basically dead; it depends on who is really coding.
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liquidation_surfer
· 12-13 23:32
Honestly, only a few can really survive, the rest are just air. It's important to see if the team is actually working on real projects.
After the Bittensor Halving, which TAO subnets will truly take off?
This question is highly discussed in the market. Halving usually reshapes market expectations and has a profound impact on capital allocation across different subnets. Historically, halvings tend to trigger two types of changes: first, affecting mining reward models; second, prompting investors to reassess ecological value.
The TAO network's subnet ecosystem itself varies greatly — some focus on AI inference, some on data services, and others on validation layers. When halving approaches, the reward curve will be rewritten, and inefficient subnets may fall behind, while projects with real applications and strong team execution will stand out.
The key is to see who is doing real things: technological iteration, expanding application scenarios, ecological integration. Hype and popularity can't last through the halving cycle. To understand which specific subnets have the most prospects, it depends on team actions and actual market feedback.