Many tokens in various cryptocurrencies are fundamentally just storytelling tools. Governance, consensus, ecological flywheels—no matter how eloquently they are described, they are essentially leveraging market imagination to drive prices. Emotions come first, then logic is used to fill in the gaps.
The Dusk project takes a completely different approach.
The existence of DUSK is not to create narratives, but because the system must have it to operate. In Dusk’s technical framework, DUSK plays a very pragmatic role: incentivizing validation nodes, supporting the economic costs of privacy computing, and maintaining network security mechanisms. It’s more like a consumable than a "core asset."
From an engineering perspective, this design is flawless. From the crypto community’s perspective, it becomes a big problem.
Why? Because the crypto world has never traded on "necessity," but on "imagination."
Consider a very realistic issue: if DUSK only generates sustained demand when the network is genuinely used, then its price logic will severely deviate from market sentiment cycles. What does this mean?
It means it’s unlikely to see explosive growth. It means its performance is more like infrastructure fuel rather than a risk asset. It means growth will be slow and gradual, not driven by emotions.
What’s even more painful is that Dusk’s target users are not retail investors, but issuers, compliance system designers, and financial architecture builders. These people won’t change their stance just because of price fluctuations.
Therefore, the demand growth for DUSK will inevitably be: rational, slow, and somewhat unclear.
In the real world, this is called healthy operation; in the crypto world, it’s a fatal weakness.
The final point is: Dusk’s token mechanism is reasonable from a design perspective, but the problem is—it was never designed for the crypto community. This fact itself is the biggest risk.
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MevWhisperer
· 01-17 17:01
Honestly, the logic of DUSK doesn't quite fit into the crypto world, and it's a bit of a disadvantage.
Wait, a slow rise with no imagination—then why buy it?
But on the other hand, maybe it's precisely because it's not born for speculation that it's the most solid.
The crypto world needs stories, and DUSK insisting on being a tool really has no chance.
It's a paradox— the more rational it is, the less people want it.
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GateUser-e51e87c7
· 01-17 17:00
In plain terms, Dusk is just too honest, and the crypto world hates honesty the most.
No story, no narrative space, for retail investors it's just a "dead" coin. That's the real tragedy.
On the other hand, projects that do well tend to die faster in the crypto space, this logic is quite harsh.
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ForkItAll
· 01-17 16:59
That really hits home. Dusk is the opposite of a successful crypto project—technically perfect but with a terrible narrative.
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WalletDivorcer
· 01-17 16:52
It's that kind of self-consolation of "I have real demand so I will go up." Wake up, demand ≠ price. The crypto circle has never bought into that.
Basically, it's being eliminated by market design. No matter how good the mechanism is, it can't stop retail investors from wanting to throw a punch of emotion.
That's why some coins will never become mainstream; being too "honest" is actually the original sin.
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EyeOfTheTokenStorm
· 01-17 16:51
That's right, this is Dusk's paradox... Truly useful things tend to suffer the most in the crypto world.
From a quantitative perspective, the volatility of infrastructure tokens is indeed much lower than that of sentiment-driven coins; historical data supports this.
So the question is, do you want to hold a "healthy asset" or do you want to make quick profits through T in market cycles? These two needs are fundamentally opposed.
No matter how good the underlying technology is, in the crypto world, you also need to tell a story; otherwise, liquidity becomes the ceiling.
Wait, then why are people still buying Dusk... Could it be that some people truly see long-term demand for privacy computing?
Honestly, the biggest fear for projects like this isn't technical issues, but being forgotten by the market... Slow growth sounds good, but in a bear market, it's just dead water.
My quantitative model shows that the price movement of DUSK is more similar to bonds than equity assets. Those with low risk appetite can consider it, but don't expect a rally like 2023.
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ForkTrooper
· 01-17 16:32
To be honest, this is a dead end. Good projects are actually hard to pump, and retail investors only want stories, not real things. Designs like Dusk are not wrong in terms of mechanism, but in the crypto world, it's just asking for trouble.
Many tokens in various cryptocurrencies are fundamentally just storytelling tools. Governance, consensus, ecological flywheels—no matter how eloquently they are described, they are essentially leveraging market imagination to drive prices. Emotions come first, then logic is used to fill in the gaps.
The Dusk project takes a completely different approach.
The existence of DUSK is not to create narratives, but because the system must have it to operate. In Dusk’s technical framework, DUSK plays a very pragmatic role: incentivizing validation nodes, supporting the economic costs of privacy computing, and maintaining network security mechanisms. It’s more like a consumable than a "core asset."
From an engineering perspective, this design is flawless. From the crypto community’s perspective, it becomes a big problem.
Why? Because the crypto world has never traded on "necessity," but on "imagination."
Consider a very realistic issue: if DUSK only generates sustained demand when the network is genuinely used, then its price logic will severely deviate from market sentiment cycles. What does this mean?
It means it’s unlikely to see explosive growth. It means its performance is more like infrastructure fuel rather than a risk asset. It means growth will be slow and gradual, not driven by emotions.
What’s even more painful is that Dusk’s target users are not retail investors, but issuers, compliance system designers, and financial architecture builders. These people won’t change their stance just because of price fluctuations.
Therefore, the demand growth for DUSK will inevitably be: rational, slow, and somewhat unclear.
In the real world, this is called healthy operation; in the crypto world, it’s a fatal weakness.
The final point is: Dusk’s token mechanism is reasonable from a design perspective, but the problem is—it was never designed for the crypto community. This fact itself is the biggest risk.