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Just wrapped up my latest round of airdrop farming notes and wanted to drop some thoughts on something I've been diving deep into lately.
So here's the thing—I've been getting tons of questions about testnet versus mainnet projects, especially around stuff like Eclipse and similar ecosystems. The common misconception is that mainnet airdrops are inherently better, but honestly? That's not necessarily true. Testnets are where projects debut their applications, mainnet is just more polished. For airdrop farming specifically, testnet interactions often cost little to nothing, while mainnet usually hits you with gas fees, NFT purchases, and staking requirements. But when it comes to actual airdrop distributions? Pretty similar vibes.
Let me be real though—airdrop farming isn't for everyone. If you need someone to explain the basics to you, maybe this isn't your lane. The people who actually succeed are the ones constantly learning and pushing through. I genuinely believe airdrop farming is one of the easiest paths for regular people to level up financially right now, but it requires actual effort.
Let me break down the fundamentals of airdrop farming:
What exactly is airdrop farming? It's when you interact with blockchain projects during their growth phase and receive free tokens as rewards. Projects do this to attract users and boost visibility. You're essentially earning tokens through these interactions—which is how you realize gains.
Quick terminology guide: TXS means transaction count. Gas Fee is what miners charge. Pool refers to liquidity mining. MINT means creating tokens. Bridge lets assets move between different blockchains. Snapshot is when projects photograph wallet states to determine rewards. Whitelist gets you priority access to better rewards. Witch accounts are ones using sketchy methods to farm multiple rewards—these get flagged and excluded.
What gets you labeled as a witch? Suspicious patterns like uniform fund distribution, batch activities crammed into short timeframes, single interactions, minimal wallet holdings, or multiple accounts shuffling funds around.
Here's what you actually need to start airdrop farming:
First up—a wallet. You need somewhere to receive and hold those airdropped tokens. I'd recommend a solid Web3 wallet that works on both desktop and mobile so you can farm while doing other stuff.
Second—social media presence. Twitter, Discord, email are pretty standard. GitHub and LinkedIn are nice-to-haves but optional.
Third—VPN setup. Most decentralized apps don't care about your IP, but logging multiple accounts from the same IP can get flagged, especially on centralized forms. Some people use fingerprint browsers for managing multiple accounts.
Fourth—a tracking spreadsheet. Document everything. Every interaction matters.
About funding—it depends on what you're farming. If you're going all-in on something like ZKSYNC, expect at least 300 USDT minimum for a year of activity at current gas rates. That covers bridges, swaps, stakes, NFT mints, and DApp interactions.
Here's the uncomfortable truth: nobody knows when airdrops actually drop. ZKSYNC said they'd distribute, Starknet might reverse-farm, so it's all speculation. You don't know when snapshots happen or when tokens release. But if you don't farm? You definitely get nothing.
The beauty of airdrop farming is the multi-catch approach—you're not just farming one project. You're hitting multiple interactions across an ecosystem, which could trigger multiple airdrop sources. One action, multiple payoffs.
On multiple accounts—my advice to newcomers is simple: learn to walk before you run. Master one account first. Once you understand the mechanics, scaling to multiple accounts becomes obvious. You don't need to overthink it.
How to pick which projects to farm? Think of it like finding one diamond among a hundred rocks. Look at funding amounts, team credibility, airdrop distribution plans, and actual development progress. These criteria separate the serious projects from the noise.
Bottom line: airdrop farming rewards persistence and learning. It's not about getting rich quick—it's about consistently showing up and understanding what you're doing. The people making real money from this aren't the ones rushing; they're the ones who studied, adapted, and stayed committed.