Recently, I noticed an interesting fundraising phenomenon—some projects launch segmented funding rounds just before going live on the platform. At first glance, it may seem a bit lengthy, but a closer look at their fundraising guidelines reveals the underlying logic.
This design actually contains a hidden mechanism: the participation thresholds for each funding round gradually increase, and the corresponding rights also exhibit varying degrees of long-term binding characteristics. In other words, the later the funding round, the higher the required capital amount, and the rights allocated also have clear time locks in terms of liquidity and release cycles. This stepwise mechanism not only ensures the stability of fundraising but also filters participants of different levels.
The reason why this project has garnered significant market attention is closely related to its frequent appearance in mainstream crypto research reports. As a highly tracked innovative project, its fundraising strategy and token distribution model have become focal points of market discussion, further amplifying the project's popularity and engagement.
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ForkMonger
· 1h ago
locking liquidity across rounds? classic governance attack setup tbh... wonder when they fork it
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GrayscaleArbitrageur
· 01-10 18:43
Oh no, it's the same old trick of cutting the leeks... Looks like a stepwise screening, but in reality, it's just to lock in retail liquidity.
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DegenApeSurfer
· 01-10 08:31
I'm a bit tired of these financing tricks; the ones who truly make money are always the earliest big players.
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RektButSmiling
· 01-10 08:31
Haha, this segmented financing approach is quite interesting. The later rounds have higher thresholds and longer lock-up periods... In other words, it's a clever art of weeding out the chives.
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PretendingToReadDocs
· 01-10 08:19
I can see through this financing design—it's just trying to keep retail investors out. The later rounds require higher thresholds. Early big investors lock in their positions for stability. In plain terms, it's still the same old scam of harvesting retail investors, just with a different disguise.
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CryptoTherapist
· 01-10 08:13
ngl this tiered funding structure is honestly giving psychological resistance levels... like you can literally *feel* the fomo anxiety building as each round closes. that time-lock mechanism? classic emotional volatility hedge tbh. the real question tho... who's actually breaking through the anxiety barrier to commit late-stage capital. that's where the true market psychology reveals itself fr fr
Recently, I noticed an interesting fundraising phenomenon—some projects launch segmented funding rounds just before going live on the platform. At first glance, it may seem a bit lengthy, but a closer look at their fundraising guidelines reveals the underlying logic.
This design actually contains a hidden mechanism: the participation thresholds for each funding round gradually increase, and the corresponding rights also exhibit varying degrees of long-term binding characteristics. In other words, the later the funding round, the higher the required capital amount, and the rights allocated also have clear time locks in terms of liquidity and release cycles. This stepwise mechanism not only ensures the stability of fundraising but also filters participants of different levels.
The reason why this project has garnered significant market attention is closely related to its frequent appearance in mainstream crypto research reports. As a highly tracked innovative project, its fundraising strategy and token distribution model have become focal points of market discussion, further amplifying the project's popularity and engagement.