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The Solana ecosystem is ushering in new developments. The Seeker Season 1 incentive program has been implemented, supporting 188 developers who launched applications on the Solana dApp Store—each receiving a reward of 750,000 SKR tokens. This is not just about token distribution; it also reflects the ecosystem's attractiveness to developers. As the Seeker user base continues to grow, early entrants have also gained platform traffic support and exposure opportunities. How this incentive model will sustainably stimulate ecosystem activity over the long term is worth watching. Solana's strategy of investing in its developer ecosystem is gradually showing results.
Early developers really have the advantage, traffic support is the key.
By the way, how long can this kind of incentive last? Or is it just another appetizer for a new round of profit-taking?
Solana's tactics are becoming more and more familiar, but the ecosystem activity has indeed increased.
188 projects are rushing in, it would be good if half of them survive the next season haha.
Compared to air, at least SKR has something to throw in, much more conscientious than some ecosystems.
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Early developers eat the meat, latercomers drink the soup... How many times has Web3 played this trick?
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Solana is indeed seriously building its ecosystem this time, unlike some chains that just talk but don't practice.
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188 developers launching simultaneously—how many real users does that represent? Or is it just another round of cutting the leeks?
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Traffic support? Well... it depends on whether Seeker itself has a user base. More incentives can't save a cold start.
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Not to boast or criticize, but this is indeed more responsible than just airdropping tokens directly.
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Seasonal incentives feel a bit perfunctory; only if they can persist for several seasons will it count.
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It's both encouragement and support, but whether it's real money or not remains to be seen.
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Early developers made a huge profit. Are there still benefits for those entering now?
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Solana's recent moves are serious; the ecosystem is indeed starting to move.
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I just want to know how many of these 188 projects will survive until next year.
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Is the growth in Seeker users just hype? Where's the data?
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188 developers holding tokens at the same time—won't they all dump their tokens in the next second? Haha.
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This is what Web3 should be doing. Finally, I see some sincerity.
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Early developers who launched this round really made a profit; traffic support is more valuable than the tokens themselves.
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Can the ecosystem's activity level be sustained? It really depends on whether these dApps can truly retain users.
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Solana's recent investment is quite sincere; it's much better than the false prosperity seen on some other chains.
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188 developers, sounds like quite a lot... but how many of them can really survive in the ecosystem?
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I just want to know if these 750,000 tokens will be dumped later; developers need to be cautious.
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This kind of incentive model is basically buying traffic, but if it can truly attract high-quality developers, it's worth it.
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Early-stage developers really made a killing, with traffic support and token giveaways. This combo punch works well.
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Incentives are incentives, but I'm worried they'll just become background noise later. Let's see who truly becomes active first.
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188 developers sounds like a lot, but the SOL ecosystem has had ups and downs over the years. We need to see how long they can stick around this time.
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No matter how many tokens are rewarded, it’s useless if users can’t stay. This is a long-term test.
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What is Seeker doing? Wasn't the hype intense before? Now they’re launching an incentive plan to turn things around?
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There are many cases of developers taking tokens and then leaving. How many can truly build the ecosystem?
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This model is a bit like a big money dump to attract traffic. The real challenge is how to maintain a healthy ecosystem afterward. That’s the difficult part.