#新币发行与空投 Seeing the turmoil with Infinex, I felt a sense of familiarity. Over more than a decade in the crypto world, I’ve seen this kind of story too many times — project teams confidently designing mechanisms during the public offering phase, only to be exposed once launched, with fundraising progress stagnating, and ultimately having to urgently adjust the rules. This cycle feels like an old recurring pattern.



What truly alarms me isn’t Infinex’s failure itself, but the signals it reveals behind the scenes. A cold reception to the public offering indicates that market enthusiasm for new coin launches has significantly waned. Remember the ICO boom of 2017? Any project could raise huge sums just by releasing a white paper. Now? Investors have become much more rational, even somewhat indifferent. This shift is actually a good thing, but it’s deadly for projects that rely on hype and speculation to get by.

More worth pondering are those "front-running" bets on Polymarket. This shows that some people knew early on that rules would change, and they had already positioned themselves in prediction markets before the information was publicly available. This not only reflects the longstanding issue of information asymmetry but also exposes a certain fragility of prediction markets themselves — they’ve become tools for a few to arbitrage information, rather than genuine mechanisms for value discovery.

Looking at this matter over a broader timeline, it actually signifies the crypto industry’s gradual maturation. Failures of rules, leaks of information, community disputes — these were once normal in early projects. Now, every controversy prompts deeper reflection. The market’s tolerance for mistakes is decreasing, which is good for the long-term health of the ecosystem, but for projects accustomed to wild growth, it’s a series of eliminations.
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