Quick Take
  • BeInCrypto spoke with 8Blocks to understand why many token economies lose control after launch, even when early demand looks strong.
  • The answer often starts before listing, in the way teams connect the token with product use, treasury planning, and long-term circulation.
  • Early token launches can look stronger than they are.
  • The problem begins when the launch becomes the core economic event.

What Happened

BeInCrypto spoke with 8Blocks to understand why many token economies lose control after launch, even when early demand looks strong. The answer often starts before listing, in the way teams connect the token with product use, treasury planning, and long-term circulation.

Early token launches can look stronger than they are. Allocation demand, investor appetite, listing attention, and market-making support often arrive at once, creating chart activity before the product has proved it can generate lasting demand for the token.

The problem begins when the launch becomes the core economic event. After the first campaign, the token needs a role inside the product and a reason to unlock user value. Otherwise, demand depends on buyers expecting a higher price.

In GameFi, utility can come from gameplay assets and resource markets. In RWA, it can come from asset access or investor permissions. The category changes, but the principle stays the same. The token needs a reason to move through the product.

When product demand is weak, trading activity starts to carry the economy. Early holders wait for price growth, reward users sell into liquidity, airdrop farmers leave after claiming, and investors treat each unlock as the next supply event. Over time, every product update is judged through the chart rather than through usage.

In GameFi, reward pressure appears fast when players earn more tokens than the game gives them reasons to spend. Stronger designs connect rewards with gameplay progress, staking, NFT minting, resource mining, upgrades, and loot markets, so player activity creates token use instead of pure extraction.

In RWA, the token has to follow the asset and the rights attached to it. Real estate, commodities, invoices, export contracts, and other tokenized assets need models built around ownership records, investor access, settlement flows, custody, and liquidity.

A pre-launch review gives founders an early view of unlock pressure, weak utility, treasury exposure, and demand mechanics before these issues reach the market. It also helps test whether rewards support product activity or create sell pressure, whether vesting matches real milestones, and whether treasury actions have enough room to support the economy through the first year.

A post-launch audit separates market mood from economic design and shows which problems come from sentiment, supply timing, weak utility, or poor circulation. The output should work in investor conversations as well as internal planning. Investors want more than slogans around utility. They want to see circulation, emissions, treasury policy, unlock risk, and user demand in a model they can understand.

Market Context

Distribution pressure appears when deep discounts and short locks make fundraising easier while giving early holders a fast exit incentive. Oversized reward pools add the same pressure. A token may gain early liquidity and then face predictable supply waves across the first year.

In DeFi, weak utility often appears when staking, governance, rewards, and liquidity incentives operate as separate mechanics. A stronger model links token use with product activity, so borrowing, lending, liquidity provision, fee flows, and protocol participation support one economic system.

Why It Matters

Waiting until the chart breaks makes reform harder. By then, early holders may already be selling, new buyers may be waiting on the sidelines, and every unlock becomes a public test of confidence.

Details

According to 8Blocks, many projects reduce token economy design to allocation tables and unlock schedules while leaving the token far from the business model. Its positioning centers on tokenized economic systems where demand comes from usage and economic control stays with the company.

Utility lies within product use

Real utility comes from repeated action inside the product.

Supply planning helps, but only up to a point. Allocation tables show where tokens go, vesting schedules show when they enter circulation, and emissions show how new supply appears. These elements manage supply; demand needs its own design.

Where control breaks

Control usually weakens in two places.

Empty utility creates the second break. Vague governance rights and badge-style perks rarely carry demand on their own. When users receive product value while bypassing the token, the token becomes optional. Optional tokens rely on belief. Belief changes faster than product adoption.

It is important to review the core model across emissions, vesting, utility, and token flows to locate weak assumptions.

Sector examples

In social and community platforms, tokens often fail when rewards are paid mainly for attention. More durable models connect token use with access, reputation, creator monetization, moderation rights, premium features, and community ownership, so participation feeds product value rather than short-term farming.

Audit before pressure

A note on 8Blocks