TGE is often a defining point in a project’s lifecycle. It is when a project makes its most pronounced shift from the private to the public sphere. Different stakeholders bring different expectations around TGE and balancing them can be a difficult task that requires careful coordination.
Over the last 18 months, we’ve seen two dominant approaches to TGEs emerge—Low Float/High FDV launches and Fair Launches. Sitting at opposite ends of the spectrum, they both have had their clear strengths and weaknesses. When it comes to delivering long term sustainable outcomes however, both approaches have largely fallen short. As crypto continues to evolve as a space, we believe that now is the time to take a step back, learn from history, and decide whether it is time for a change.
This article proposes a middle-ground TGE model that harnesses on-chain liquidity, fosters authentic public price discovery, and ensures insiders—both team and investors—are incentive-aligned around long term success. Before we delve into the mechanics, let’s see how two prominent approaches to TGEs crumbled under their own flaws, what the market’s reaction taught us, and why an on-chain-centric approach is the logical next step for projects pursuing enduring success.
1.Low Float / High FDV: Quick Profits, Quick Disillusion
The Low Float/High FDV format typically involves multiple pre-TGE funding rounds at escalating valuations, followed by a minimal circulating supply on day one. Initially, it can create the illusion of scarcity and fuel a dramatic price spike. However, over time we see several issues arise:
In essence, the Low Float/High FDV approach fosters an environment where insiders can capitalize quickly. This often leaves retail participants or late-stage buyers at a disadvantage. Projects often struggle beyond the first year because many insiders who profited early have little reason to remain engaged.
2.The Fair Launch Shift—and Its Own Shortcomings
Frustrated by the failures of the Low Float/High FDV model, the market responded by shifting its support towards Fair Launches. Aiming to create open, egalitarian TGE structures, Fair Launches put tokens into the hands of the public from the outset, minimizing insider advantage and large private allocations. While the premise was well-intentioned, over time this launch strategy has revealed its own set of shortcomings:
Fair Launches initially felt like a breath of fresh air as they encouraged more “open” participation. However, they ultimately have also failed in creating a long term viable market structure. Seeing this, the market was once again left looking for alternatives.
Both the Low Float/High FDV and Fair Launch approaches failed in their own ways. Having observed the market’s response to both, we have learned the following lessons:
Reviewing these failures and the market’s pushback underscores a central principle: long-term sustainable markets thrive when price discovery is done publicly, on-chain, and when insiders cannot easily offload tokens behind closed doors. On-chain trading fosters real-time accountability regarding who holds what and at what price they’re selling.
Ensuring enough liquidity at every stage of a token’s lifecycle demands a structure that integrates:
This leads directly to the concept of a DeFi-native TGE—an approach that melds capital raising and public liquidity formation, aligning insiders with the project’s long term fate.
At its core, our proposal seeks to:
Here’s how:
1.Phased Liquidity Provision (Single-Sided & Dual-Sided)
2.Price-Based Unlocks & Locking LP Positions
3.Encouraging Early Investors to Exit Pre-TGE
4.Smart Contract Controls & Compliance
5.TGE Pricing & Team Inclusion
6.Gradually Graduating into CEX Listings
This DeFi-native TGE format addresses many issues while supporting deeper public price discovery:
Most importantly, it orients everyone—founders, early investors, and new participants—toward sustainable long-term growth rather than quick, opportunistic exits.
Even as this model addresses common TGE failures, it invites further exploration:
From Low Float/High FDV to Fair Launch, crypto has swung between extremes—one yielding short-term profits for insiders, the other lacking sufficient funding or sustainable liquidity to succeed. Both options leave participants optimizing for extremely short-term outcomes, disillusioned with fleeting hype and manipulative practices.
By introducing a DeFi-native TGE—rooted in phased on-chain liquidity, incremental unlocks based on metrics, and enforced transparency—we chart a middle ground:
While no single TGE model will fit every project, it is evident that we need a blueprint that fosters genuine on-chain price discovery, robust market liquidity, and deep alignment amongst stakeholders. The DeFi-native TGE format aims to take a meaningful step toward these goals.
We invite readers to scrutinize these ideas, to propose refinements, and to experiment with real-world deployments. Crypto thrives on innovation and iteration. By challenging the norms of Low Float/High FDV and Fair Launch formats, we can pave the way for healthier incentive structures—ensuring that long-term value creation triumphs over short-lived hype.
Ultimately, if this article sparks discourse about bridging the best aspects of each TGE model, encouraging new solutions that reward genuine growth rather than quick exits, we’ve done our job. Let’s work together to craft a token launch environment where everyone stands to gain from sustained success, and the market can rightfully reward the builders, investors, and community members who champion crypto’s bright future.
This article is reprinted from [X]. All copyrights belong to the original author [@DougieDeLuca]. If there are objections to this reprint, please contact the Gate Learn team, and they will handle it promptly.
Liability Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not constitute any investment advice.
Translations of the article into other languages are done by the Gate Learn team. Unless mentioned, copying, distributing, or plagiarizing the translated articles is prohibited.
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TGE is often a defining point in a project’s lifecycle. It is when a project makes its most pronounced shift from the private to the public sphere. Different stakeholders bring different expectations around TGE and balancing them can be a difficult task that requires careful coordination.
Over the last 18 months, we’ve seen two dominant approaches to TGEs emerge—Low Float/High FDV launches and Fair Launches. Sitting at opposite ends of the spectrum, they both have had their clear strengths and weaknesses. When it comes to delivering long term sustainable outcomes however, both approaches have largely fallen short. As crypto continues to evolve as a space, we believe that now is the time to take a step back, learn from history, and decide whether it is time for a change.
This article proposes a middle-ground TGE model that harnesses on-chain liquidity, fosters authentic public price discovery, and ensures insiders—both team and investors—are incentive-aligned around long term success. Before we delve into the mechanics, let’s see how two prominent approaches to TGEs crumbled under their own flaws, what the market’s reaction taught us, and why an on-chain-centric approach is the logical next step for projects pursuing enduring success.
1.Low Float / High FDV: Quick Profits, Quick Disillusion
The Low Float/High FDV format typically involves multiple pre-TGE funding rounds at escalating valuations, followed by a minimal circulating supply on day one. Initially, it can create the illusion of scarcity and fuel a dramatic price spike. However, over time we see several issues arise:
In essence, the Low Float/High FDV approach fosters an environment where insiders can capitalize quickly. This often leaves retail participants or late-stage buyers at a disadvantage. Projects often struggle beyond the first year because many insiders who profited early have little reason to remain engaged.
2.The Fair Launch Shift—and Its Own Shortcomings
Frustrated by the failures of the Low Float/High FDV model, the market responded by shifting its support towards Fair Launches. Aiming to create open, egalitarian TGE structures, Fair Launches put tokens into the hands of the public from the outset, minimizing insider advantage and large private allocations. While the premise was well-intentioned, over time this launch strategy has revealed its own set of shortcomings:
Fair Launches initially felt like a breath of fresh air as they encouraged more “open” participation. However, they ultimately have also failed in creating a long term viable market structure. Seeing this, the market was once again left looking for alternatives.
Both the Low Float/High FDV and Fair Launch approaches failed in their own ways. Having observed the market’s response to both, we have learned the following lessons:
Reviewing these failures and the market’s pushback underscores a central principle: long-term sustainable markets thrive when price discovery is done publicly, on-chain, and when insiders cannot easily offload tokens behind closed doors. On-chain trading fosters real-time accountability regarding who holds what and at what price they’re selling.
Ensuring enough liquidity at every stage of a token’s lifecycle demands a structure that integrates:
This leads directly to the concept of a DeFi-native TGE—an approach that melds capital raising and public liquidity formation, aligning insiders with the project’s long term fate.
At its core, our proposal seeks to:
Here’s how:
1.Phased Liquidity Provision (Single-Sided & Dual-Sided)
2.Price-Based Unlocks & Locking LP Positions
3.Encouraging Early Investors to Exit Pre-TGE
4.Smart Contract Controls & Compliance
5.TGE Pricing & Team Inclusion
6.Gradually Graduating into CEX Listings
This DeFi-native TGE format addresses many issues while supporting deeper public price discovery:
Most importantly, it orients everyone—founders, early investors, and new participants—toward sustainable long-term growth rather than quick, opportunistic exits.
Even as this model addresses common TGE failures, it invites further exploration:
From Low Float/High FDV to Fair Launch, crypto has swung between extremes—one yielding short-term profits for insiders, the other lacking sufficient funding or sustainable liquidity to succeed. Both options leave participants optimizing for extremely short-term outcomes, disillusioned with fleeting hype and manipulative practices.
By introducing a DeFi-native TGE—rooted in phased on-chain liquidity, incremental unlocks based on metrics, and enforced transparency—we chart a middle ground:
While no single TGE model will fit every project, it is evident that we need a blueprint that fosters genuine on-chain price discovery, robust market liquidity, and deep alignment amongst stakeholders. The DeFi-native TGE format aims to take a meaningful step toward these goals.
We invite readers to scrutinize these ideas, to propose refinements, and to experiment with real-world deployments. Crypto thrives on innovation and iteration. By challenging the norms of Low Float/High FDV and Fair Launch formats, we can pave the way for healthier incentive structures—ensuring that long-term value creation triumphs over short-lived hype.
Ultimately, if this article sparks discourse about bridging the best aspects of each TGE model, encouraging new solutions that reward genuine growth rather than quick exits, we’ve done our job. Let’s work together to craft a token launch environment where everyone stands to gain from sustained success, and the market can rightfully reward the builders, investors, and community members who champion crypto’s bright future.
This article is reprinted from [X]. All copyrights belong to the original author [@DougieDeLuca]. If there are objections to this reprint, please contact the Gate Learn team, and they will handle it promptly.
Liability Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not constitute any investment advice.
Translations of the article into other languages are done by the Gate Learn team. Unless mentioned, copying, distributing, or plagiarizing the translated articles is prohibited.