
Cryptoeyes
4.4K posts

Cryptoeyes
@Cryptoeyes_Pi
Pi network, Earn the next 💸big 💵#cryptocurrency 💰from #PiNetwork #Piblockchain #PiWallet #DEX #PiSDK #PiLaunchPad #Appstudio Invitation code: Cryptoeyes











Most crypto networks are pseudonymous by design, which makes them hard to use for real-world apps. $PI forced identity verification from day one. A verified human user base at scale is something almost no other network has, and it's a real competitive moat for merchants and developes.


🚨 More than 500 projects. Hundreds of partnerships. Yet XLM still trades below $0.20. Why❓ Because the market does not value a blockchain based on the number of partnerships it has. It values a blockchain based on how indispensable its native token is. Those are two very different things. A blockchain can be extraordinarily successful as infrastructure. Hundreds of companies can build on it. Millions of transactions can flow through it every day. But if all of that activity doesn't create meaningful demand to own the token, the token's price doesn't necessarily rise. That is the challenge Stellar has faced. Stellar was engineered to move value faster, cheaper, and more efficiently. The more efficient the network becomes, the less XLM is actually needed to operate it. That's a tremendous advantage for users—but it doesn't create sustained buying pressure for the token. In other words: > Network value does not automatically translate into token value. This is one of the biggest misconceptions in crypto investing. Google serves billions of users, yet you don't need to buy a "Google Token" to use its search engine. Visa processes trillions of dollars every year, yet swiping your card doesn't require you to own Visa stock. A blockchain can fall into the same category if its native token is not at the center of the network's economic model. The lesson for Pi Network This is also the fundamental question Pi Network will eventually have to answer. The real questions are not: How many DApps are built? How many partnerships are announced? How many registered users are there? The real question is: If all those applications succeed, will they be required to buy and use Pi? If the answer is yes, the value created by the ecosystem has a pathway to flow back into the value of the Pi token. If the answer is no, Pi could follow the same path as many other blockchains: a growing ecosystem whose native token fails to capture the value being created. In the end, markets don't reward the blockchain with the most partnerships. They reward the blockchain whose token is economically indispensable. That is the difference between a token that is merely used and one that is genuinely sought after.


Bro, these scammers have already scooped billions of dollars. They're not doing any major work on this project. They probably have a few unskilled and lower-paid developers on it, even though they could hire hundreds of high-end developers by now! These couples are just laughing at us. They really don’t care anymore. They’ll do little things here and there until they dump all their reserved 35 billion tokens into the market. It's a slow rug pull! Then they’ll leave the project to the community and enjoy their lives! Teaching blockchain technology at Stanford doesn’t provide billion dollars, even after teaching for 1,000 years straight! But fooling 60-plus million people made them billionaires in less than 5 years! ✍️CryptoXDElon












