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Been following Pi Network's journey and there's something worth talking about here. When it launched on mainnet back in 2019 with that mobile mining model, everyone was hyped. 60+ million registered users, right? That's massive. But here's where reality hits different from expectations.
Price action tells the story. Started around $2.2, got people excited, then... it just didn't hold. Now we're looking at roughly $0.17 per token according to latest data, which is way below what OTC traders were betting on before mainnet launch. A lot of people who thought this would moon are facing some tough losses. The gap between hype and actual market performance? That's real.
What's interesting is how EUREX handled the listing. They went with this "isolation mode" thing - basically different regions get different access levels. Users in mainland China can't trade it. US, India, other major crypto markets? Similar restrictions. On one hand, you get why they did it. Global crypto regulation is getting tighter everywhere, and exchanges are under pressure to stay compliant. EUREX is trying to manage legal risk across different jurisdictions. Makes sense from a business standpoint.
But here's the friction - a lot of Pi supporters feel locked out. Especially in markets where Pi has huge user bases. People who spent years on the mobile mining app suddenly can't actually trade their coins where they are. That's created real frustration and honestly, it's feeding into doubts about the whole project.
Then there's the controversy that just won't go away. Pi Network keeps saying their social recommendation model isn't MLM, it's just how they grow users. But the market isn't convinced. That π-related controversy around potential pyramid scheme dynamics has been haunting the project for years. It's one of those things that shapes how investors think about it, whether fair or not.
The core challenge for Pi? They need to prove the mobile mining model actually works long-term and build real use cases on top of that user base. Right now it feels like a lot of potential but not enough delivery. Can they clear the compliance hurdles, expand trading access, and actually get people using Pi for something meaningful? That's the question.
Long term, if they can partner with other blockchain projects, create actual applications, and solve the geo-restriction issue through proper compliance, there's still potential. But right now, Pi's stuck between massive user numbers and serious credibility gaps. Whether they can bridge that gap is still wide open.