🔥 Gate Square Event: #PostToWinNIGHT 🔥
Post anything related to NIGHT to join!
Market outlook, project thoughts, research takeaways, user experience — all count.
📅 Event Duration: Dec 10 08:00 - Dec 21 16:00 UTC
📌 How to Participate
1️⃣ Post on Gate Square (text, analysis, opinions, or image posts are all valid)
2️⃣ Add the hashtag #PostToWinNIGHT or #发帖赢代币NIGHT
🏆 Rewards (Total: 1,000 NIGHT)
🥇 Top 1: 200 NIGHT
🥈 Top 4: 100 NIGHT each
🥉 Top 10: 40 NIGHT each
📄 Notes
Content must be original (no plagiarism or repetitive spam)
Winners must complete Gate Square identity verification
Gat
To be honest, when YGG announced its token launch, I was busy grinding in Axie to earn some extra cash. The group chat blew up—everyone was talking about “how much airdrop can we farm” and “how many Xs at launch.” I got excited too, but there was always this lingering question in my mind: aside from speculation, what can this thing actually do?
Later, as I watched it gradually evolve from a concept into the backbone of an entire ecosystem, it finally hit me—their initial design wasn’t just laying down some simple foreshadowing.
That whitepaper: more like a national budget proposal than a crypto PPT
I pored over their earliest token allocation plan. Honestly, the share given to the community wasn’t particularly generous at the time. But one detail really stuck with me: this sense of calculated restraint.
They didn’t pull the usual “team reserves a massive chunk and then locks it up as a gesture” trick. You could clearly see detailed plans for sections like “community treasury,” “ecosystem development,” and “partner incentives.” It didn’t feel like they were just launching a token—it was more like they were designing a financial system for a digital organization. The core message was: the token primarily serves the organization’s long-term operations, not quick profits for a select few.
This “build the framework first, token as a tool” logic is a completely different species from those projects that rush to exchanges for a quick cash grab. Back then, I started to think these guys might actually be trying to build something lasting.
Early feature design: like a three-legged stool
When the token first launched, the feature design looked pretty basic—governance rights, staking mechanism, rewards distribution. That’s it. Some people in the community joked that it was a “three-legged stool”—stable, sure, but nothing fancy.