Ever wonder where burned tokens actually go? Or what a burn address even is?
Token burning happens constantly in major ecosystems. Ethereum executes burns on every single transaction. BNB runs quarterly burns worth over $1 billion each time. It's not random—projects do this strategically.
Why burn tokens at all? Three main reasons stand out. First, it combats inflation by permanently removing supply from circulation. Second, scarcity drives value. Fewer tokens floating around typically means stronger price dynamics. Third, it aligns incentives. When a project burns tokens, holders benefit from the reduced supply.
The mechanics are straightforward: tokens get sent to an address specifically designed so no one can ever move them again. Once they land there, they're locked forever. Gone from the market permanently.
This isn't just accounting theater. Sustainable token economics require addressing inflation. Burning gives projects a concrete tool to manage supply while showing holders they're serious about long-term value creation. It's become a standard feature in how modern crypto projects maintain their token models.
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FlashLoanLarry
· 5h ago
nah the "locked forever" thing is theater too if we're being honest. seen enough protocol exploits to know nothing's truly immutable lol. but yeah, the supply management thesis still holds—opportunity cost of not burning would destroy basis points on holder returns. the real play is watching *when* projects burn, not *if*. timing delta hits different
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LoneValidator
· 5h ago
NGL burn mechanism is just a disguised reason to cut leek; the real beneficiaries are still early token holders.
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OnchainHolmes
· 5h ago
It's the same old story... Can burning truly sustain prices in the long run? I suspect it's more of a psychological tactic.
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MysteriousZhang
· 5h ago
Burning coins is like destruction in the digital age? Then why not just lower the price directly lol
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SelfRugger
· 5h ago
Basically, it's just locking the pool. It looks sophisticated but in reality, it's the same old trick as traditional money-grabbing schemes.
Ever wonder where burned tokens actually go? Or what a burn address even is?
Token burning happens constantly in major ecosystems. Ethereum executes burns on every single transaction. BNB runs quarterly burns worth over $1 billion each time. It's not random—projects do this strategically.
Why burn tokens at all? Three main reasons stand out. First, it combats inflation by permanently removing supply from circulation. Second, scarcity drives value. Fewer tokens floating around typically means stronger price dynamics. Third, it aligns incentives. When a project burns tokens, holders benefit from the reduced supply.
The mechanics are straightforward: tokens get sent to an address specifically designed so no one can ever move them again. Once they land there, they're locked forever. Gone from the market permanently.
This isn't just accounting theater. Sustainable token economics require addressing inflation. Burning gives projects a concrete tool to manage supply while showing holders they're serious about long-term value creation. It's become a standard feature in how modern crypto projects maintain their token models.