Complaining is fine, but it’s no fun to make baseless accusations without solid evidence.
Take Lighter as an example. I’ve been monitoring their Discord invite codes from April to June. The pattern during that period was very clear—Tuesday was the refresh day. As soon as the invite codes were released, anyone could easily grab a dozen or more. Throughout the process, about 70% of the invite codes were claimed on Tuesday, and only by Wednesday would they be moved to the public channel for everyone to use.
More than half a year has passed, and I still remember these details very clearly. What does this mean? It shows that if you really want to understand a project’s community operation logic, you need to spend time observing and recording those seemingly minor but recurring patterns. Merely complaining won’t reveal these insights.
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FlashLoanPhantom
· 4h ago
Wow, this guy really put in effort. He even figured out details like the Tuesday squat invitation code.
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OnChainArchaeologist
· 4h ago
Ha, data and details make it interesting; otherwise, it's like arguing with a market auntie.
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DancingCandles
· 4h ago
This guy really speaks with data, unlike some people who make up stories every day. On Tuesday, 70% of the codes were snapped up, why didn't I catch that detail? Lost out.
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GasWaster
· 4h ago
Yeah, this guy really put in the effort and stayed dedicated, unlike some people who just talk nonsense every day.
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RektHunter
· 4h ago
Are the group of people who queued on Tuesday still around now? Haha
Complaining is fine, but it’s no fun to make baseless accusations without solid evidence.
Take Lighter as an example. I’ve been monitoring their Discord invite codes from April to June. The pattern during that period was very clear—Tuesday was the refresh day. As soon as the invite codes were released, anyone could easily grab a dozen or more. Throughout the process, about 70% of the invite codes were claimed on Tuesday, and only by Wednesday would they be moved to the public channel for everyone to use.
More than half a year has passed, and I still remember these details very clearly. What does this mean? It shows that if you really want to understand a project’s community operation logic, you need to spend time observing and recording those seemingly minor but recurring patterns. Merely complaining won’t reveal these insights.