The economic model of the $US token is quite interesting, so let's break down its core design.
First, the total supply: it's capped at 10 billion tokens, set in stone with no further issuance. The key is its deflationary mechanism—zero inflation rate as the baseline, and tokens are burned directly using on-chain transaction fees to tighten supply. This approach works pretty well in a bull market.
The TGE is coming soon, and the current circulating supply is zero. It's expected that 2.2 billion tokens will be released to the market at launch.
The largest allocation in the distribution plan is for community and ecosystem development, accounting for 30%. These funds will be used for user incentives, project grants, and liquidity pool injections.
In short: fixed supply + ongoing deflation + large proportion returned to the community—a typical long-term value capture model. Of course, whether it works out will depend on subsequent execution and market acceptance.
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screenshot_gains
· 10h ago
Capped at 10 billion plus ongoing deflation sounds pretty solid. Now it just depends on how the market reacts after TGE.
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ETHReserveBank
· 10h ago
2.2 billion invested at launch; the deflationary model sounds good, but persistence is key. Many projects eventually ended up as worthless coins.
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StakeTillRetire
· 10h ago
This model looks pretty good, but what I’m most concerned about is whether those 2.2 billion tokens at launch will cause a price dump.
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ZenMiner
· 11h ago
I've seen plenty of these "capped at 10 billion" tricks before. The key is still to see how it performs after the TGE and whether it breaks below the issue price.
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GameFiCritic
· 11h ago
2.2 billion initial release poses a direct risk of dumping. The claim that 30% is allocated for community rewards sounds good, but how many real users will actually stick around is still a question. The deflationary model is attractive, but the real concern is that it might end up as just another project designed to fleece retail investors.
The economic model of the $US token is quite interesting, so let's break down its core design.
First, the total supply: it's capped at 10 billion tokens, set in stone with no further issuance. The key is its deflationary mechanism—zero inflation rate as the baseline, and tokens are burned directly using on-chain transaction fees to tighten supply. This approach works pretty well in a bull market.
The TGE is coming soon, and the current circulating supply is zero. It's expected that 2.2 billion tokens will be released to the market at launch.
The largest allocation in the distribution plan is for community and ecosystem development, accounting for 30%. These funds will be used for user incentives, project grants, and liquidity pool injections.
In short: fixed supply + ongoing deflation + large proportion returned to the community—a typical long-term value capture model. Of course, whether it works out will depend on subsequent execution and market acceptance.