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The structural reversal of TGE: Is it a "liability" that gets liquidated or an "asset" that remains?
For a long time, TGE (Token Generation Event) has been regarded as the “finish line” of Crypto. But after experiencing a series of narrative collapses and liquidity shortages, this logic is undergoing a structural reversal.
With regulatory frameworks taking shape and institutional forces participating, we may see a larger wave of TGE.
As 2026 approaches, we are in a critical period of transformation in the Crypto market.
In this market context, TGE has become an “adulthood ceremony” that is highly anticipated yet painfully challenging for each project.
In this cycle, when we observe and discuss the significance, quantity, frequency, and changes of TGE (Token Generation Event), we find that: Crypto is shifting from a “valuation discovery” phase to a “value discovery” phase.
2025 - 2026: The Year of TGE Boom and Structural Predictions
Driven by regulatory details (such as the US SEC, EU MiCA) and macro market cycle forecasts, 2026 is highly likely to become the “explosive year” for TGE.
From a macro perspective, the increased clarity of regulation, the maturity of institutional products like ETFs and futures, all suggest that the “macro rhythm” of TGE events is broadly defined by the question: “When is it suitable for TGE?” providing a wide time window.
By the end of 2025, many projects are focused on token structure compliance and have pre-locked investors by the end of 2025; some projects have proactively delayed to 2026, indicating expectations for market opportunities that year. This suggests that 2026 could be a peak issuance period, serving as a window for TGE and liquidity release, with an expected increase of 15%–30% in TGE numbers compared to 2025.
However, the surge in TGE quantity does not mean opportunities are everywhere.
2026 is a “supply-heavy year,” during which we will face: unlocking of many old projects, the backlog of delayed TGEs from 2024–2025, and possibly new narrative projects’ TGE. In this scenario, market tolerance for “new TGE” is decreasing.
On one hand, more compliant and institutionally-oriented projects are entering; on the other hand, the concentration of TGE in new projects leads to extreme liquidity scarcity.
From a more macro perspective, 2026 may see a dual increase in both the quantity and quality of TGE, accompanied by significant volatility.
At a micro level, the essence of TGE has changed. In past cycles, TGE could be defined as a marketing activity with “returns greater than costs”:
Currently, market attention is dispersed, and the costs and difficulties of branding are increasing. “Early users” are not concerned with the product but only with token monetization, heavily relying on incentives. This means that the cost and benefit structure of TGE has undergone a fundamental reversal.
The “Token First, Product Later” Path is Gradually Failing
Compared to previous cycles, public chains relied on tokens and grand narratives to build distribution advantages, then channel traffic into ecosystems, and finally develop applications.
This pathway is failing:
If 2026 is a brutal year of competition, how should projects view TGE?
Future projects need to carefully plan in areas such as product delivery, token economy design, market timing, community building, differentiated narratives, and compliance transparency to stand out during the upcoming dense TGE period.
Conclusion: Survival Rules for 2026
Some failures of TGE are not due to product quality or team experience but stem from a lack of resilience in facing market scrutiny, peer competition, and narrative shifts. Rushing to launch without being prepared for open market competition and narrative changes.
In 2026, the market is likely to fall into a cycle of “dense issuance of TGEs, value volatility and collapse, market restructuring and reshaping,” with those blindly chasing highs ultimately facing liquidity shortages.
What needs to be recognized is: tokens are no longer synonymous with growth, and narratives cannot generate value out of thin air.
A successful TGE is not measured by listing or volatility, but by whether the team has the capacity to “pay off debts” before TGE—i.e., whether they have found a PMF capable of generating sustainable cash flow or real users.
This harsh transformation back to value is essentially market self-purification, opening up more fertile ground for long-termists.