大匡
大匡|Jul 18, 2026 04:22
Recently, a lot of creators have been grinding hard on farming activities. Same old strategy: stay active, stack interactions, and use batches of accounts to compete. But @NucleusCodes is focusing on your on-chain records, cutting down on mass farming. They’re building an on-chain reputation system that integrates users’ past behaviors, including on-chain activities, social contributions, content quality, ecosystem participation, and holdings, to create a more well-rounded user profile. For project teams, this means they can more accurately identify users who genuinely care about the ecosystem and are willing to participate long-term. For community members, the contributions they’ve accumulated won’t just disappear when an event ends. What I find interesting about Nucleus is how it turns reputation from a vague concept into an asset that can actually be retained. On top of that, Nucleus is also exploring community governance, turning users from mere participants into ecosystem builders. Discussions, proposals, voting—these actions can all become part of governance. There’ve been quite a few project activities lately. I’ve also joined @EthraShip’s creator program and am currently hustling to climb the leaderboard. Of course, the success of a reputation system ultimately depends on execution—how to prevent data manipulation and ensure fair scoring are long-term challenges that need to be addressed. If Web3 wants to move beyond short-term incentives and farming culture, and establish a contribution- and reputation-based distribution system, Nucleus is tackling a very core issue.
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