Decentralized exchange dYdX recently announced the launch of a large-scale incentive program, with a $20 million reward pool distributed over nine seasons. The design of this mechanism is quite interesting — traders do not need to register in advance; simply trading on the platform automatically enrolls them in the competition.
Reward distribution adopts a differentiated strategy, set across multiple dimensions such as trading fee levels, exclusive tasks for retail traders, and returning users. The platform also added a bonus market feature, allowing traders to earn leaderboard points through specific actions, overall moving towards a gamified competition approach. Interestingly, this set of rules is entirely governed by the DAO community, leaving significant room for future adjustments.
From an operational perspective, this type of incentive model indeed easily stimulates trading enthusiasm. By distributing rewards in long-term phases, it can create sustained participation motivation, which should help with platform liquidity return. The gamified competition mechanism also caters to current traders’ preferences — many enjoy the feeling of leaderboard competition.
The question is whether it can truly retain users. Short-term participants chasing rewards and those who genuinely believe in the platform’s long-term development are actually quite different groups.
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GasFeeBarbecue
· 14h ago
20 million for free, and you can still climb the leaderboard. This gameplay is indeed easy to get hooked on.
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AirdropAutomaton
· 17h ago
Spending 20 million dollars will definitely boost short-term popularity, but whether it can truly retain users depends on whether the product itself is compelling enough.
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StakeTillRetire
· 19h ago
20 million dollars sounds like a lot, but spread over nine seasons, it's not much... probably only a few will actually stay.
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TheSimplestPathLeadsToThe
· 12-27 01:10
Garbage stuff
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OnchainGossiper
· 12-26 16:55
20 million USD sounds like a lot, but when divided over nine seasons, it quickly gets diluted. In the end, how much can really be in your hands?
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alpha_leaker
· 12-26 16:53
It's just another set of reward-grabbing tricks; you'll fall behind after a few seasons if you can't stick with it.
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UncleLiquidation
· 12-26 16:51
Most of the rewards are claimed by airdrop hunters; genuine liquidity can't be retained.
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BTCBeliefStation
· 12-26 16:36
Oh, it's that "ranking up to make money" trick again. Once the rewards are distributed, they just run away.
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LiquidityWizard
· 12-26 16:32
theoretically speaking, 20m spread across 9 seasons is actually just incentivizing farming behavior... statistically significant that they're ignoring churn rates entirely tho
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LiquidationWizard
· 12-26 16:26
It's the same old trick, throwing money to attract traffic, then leaving after the quarter is over.
Decentralized exchange dYdX recently announced the launch of a large-scale incentive program, with a $20 million reward pool distributed over nine seasons. The design of this mechanism is quite interesting — traders do not need to register in advance; simply trading on the platform automatically enrolls them in the competition.
Reward distribution adopts a differentiated strategy, set across multiple dimensions such as trading fee levels, exclusive tasks for retail traders, and returning users. The platform also added a bonus market feature, allowing traders to earn leaderboard points through specific actions, overall moving towards a gamified competition approach. Interestingly, this set of rules is entirely governed by the DAO community, leaving significant room for future adjustments.
From an operational perspective, this type of incentive model indeed easily stimulates trading enthusiasm. By distributing rewards in long-term phases, it can create sustained participation motivation, which should help with platform liquidity return. The gamified competition mechanism also caters to current traders’ preferences — many enjoy the feeling of leaderboard competition.
The question is whether it can truly retain users. Short-term participants chasing rewards and those who genuinely believe in the platform’s long-term development are actually quite different groups.