The Meituan War in the cryptocurrency circle: the traffic game behind Alpha Points

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链捕手
7 hours ago
This article is approximately 1016 words,and reading the entire article takes about 2 minutes
In the seemingly lively Exchange Subsidy War, the more points you earn and the higher the threshold, the more ordinary users become like background members.

Original author: Scof, ChainCatcher

Original editor: TB, ChainCatcher

The takeout market has suddenly become lively recently.

JD.com is making efforts, Alibaba is entering the market, and Meituan is taking on the challenge. A three-way melee has begun. We can see that free milk tea, 10 billion subsidies, and 30-minute delivery of good products are coming one after another. The logic behind them is not complicated: bind users through high-frequency consumption scenarios (takeout), thereby laying the foundation for their own instant retail business.

This is very similar to the fierce competition among exchanges in the crypto world. Binance’s Alpha Points system is the most typical example. Points for new listings, airdrop rankings, and trading rankings - in other words, it is also a “subsidy war” in the digital asset field. It is not a fight for new users, but a fight for users’ attention, trading behavior, and loyalty.

Other exchanges are also not idle. Bybit followed suit and launched the pledged version of Alpha points airdrop, benchmarking Binances gameplay and trying to compete for the same group of highly active users; OKX announced that it would launch a million-dollar airdrop plan.

This is a typical stock game.

Alpha Points Coupons Reach New Heights, Ordinary Users Are Marginalized

The popularity of the Alpha sector continues to rise. On May 5, Binance Alphas trading volume exceeded $274 million, and the number of daily transactions exceeded 1 million for the first time. The key to this surge in data is the rising Alpha Points threshold.

The Meituan War in the cryptocurrency circle: the traffic game behind Alpha Points

Data source: Dune, @Pandajackson

In the initial stage, 50 points might be enough to qualify for short-selling. But the score line in the latest round has soared to 142 points, and nearly 10 points must be obtained every day in the past 15 days, corresponding to a trading volume of $1,024. Many ordinary players were caught off guard.

Crypto KOL Xia Xueyi said that even if she lost tens of thousands of dollars in a month, she was still ineligible. Because under this mechanism, only large traders and studios that are continuously active and trade at high frequencies can maintain their points competitiveness.

At the same time, although Binance launched consolation prizes such as Lucky Airdrop for UID Tail X, it actually has limited appeal to real retail users. A large number of subsidies ultimately flowed to institutional users and scoring teams.

This is very similar to the freeloaders in the food delivery war: they flock to new platforms for short-term subsidies, but once the price advantage is gone, most people will return to the platforms they are familiar with and trust.

Binance Ecosystem’s Conspiracy: Designing Rules and Creating Traffic

Let’s look at the strategy behind the Alpha Points System: Stakestone uses 5% of its tokens for IDO, 1.5% for main site airdrops, and 3.93% for old users, for a total of 10.43% of its tokens. These tokens bring a potential selling pressure of more than $5 million at a price of $0.06, and even close to $9 million at the high point.

However, the project team did not choose to sell immediately, but guided the trading volume and maintained the stability of the coin price, and finally met the standard requirements for listing on Binance. This is not a simple market behavior, but a cooperation game with the algorithm.

In other words, the exchange does not wait for the project to grow naturally, but has designed an access system that says If you want to go online, you have to follow my lead. Alpha points are used to screen users, trading volume is used to screen project parties, and coin price performance is used to screen market value management capabilities.

Finally, the closed loop is completed: traffic comes in, data looks good, transaction volume soars, and the platform wins.

Who is the winner? Who can hold on to the end?

The war between exchanges is actually the same as that between food delivery platforms: spending money to attract people, subsidizing the market, and creating a traffic boom. But for users, what is really left after the excitement? Many people work hard to score points in the Alpha points system and lose money to exchange for qualifications, but in the end they find that they did not get the airdrops or participate in the new listings, and they just added bricks to the platform data.

Platforms can change their tactics repeatedly, but users’ choices are always realistic. Many people will switch platforms for short-term subsidies, but once the price advantage disappears and the rules become complicated, most people will return to the place they are familiar with. Subsidies can only bring traffic, but not retain trust.

This also leads to a practical problem: Alpha is defined as a place to incubate high-quality projects, but the projects listed do not always perform well. Some projects start high and end low, and it is difficult for them to enter the spot area of Binances main site, and they are regarded as temporary project areas by users. Over time, will this frequent occurrence of low-quality listings damage Alphas reputation and even affect users confidence in the entire Binance listing system?

From a more macro perspective, does the crypto world still have an incremental market? If everything has become a battle for stock, how do we ultimately measure the value of users?

In this era of stock game, exchanges need users’ loyalty and behavior; users need the platform’s trust and long-term returns. If this relationship starts to become unbalanced, it will be a greater cost than missing an airdrop.

The takeaway war can at least bring a cup of free milk tea, so many users hope that the subsidy war can continue for a while so that they can save more money. Similarly, seeing Binance, OKX, and Bybit take turns to compete for users, users also expect other exchanges to be more aggressive - not just let users work to score points, but really make concessions and turn competition into a benign game that benefits users.

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