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The Six-Year Evolution of Web3 Airdrops: From Uniswap to Monad, How Should Ordinary People Properly "Claim Airdrops" in 2026?
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Author: kkmoat, Founder of GANx Labs & Chinese-language lead for stacks.btc
At its core, a Web3 airdrop is when a project incentivizes early users to participate by distributing native tokens or NFTs for free—bootstrapping liquidity, enabling decentralized governance, and quickly accumulating the community and TVL (total value locked).
From the “DeFi summer” that began with Uniswap in 2020 until now, airdrops have evolved from a simple “everyone gets some” marketing gimmick into a complex behavior-incentive system, anti-Sybil (Sybil attacks) mechanisms, and long-term retention tools.
Current trends in 2026 show that blanket (blanket-style) airdrops have cooled off significantly, shifting toward threshold-based (threshold-style), quest/task-mining (task mining), and hybrid models. The focus is on real usage—not farming volume.
Phase 1 (2020): The “Genesis Age” of DeFi airdrops
Representative projects
Uniswap
1inch
dYdX
You have to mention Uniswap because: all subsequent airdrops basically descend from it
September 2020:
Uniswap distributed 400 UNI to historical users
Directly changed industry allocation patterns
It’s basically considered: Web3’s first large-scale “wealth redistribution event”
Key characteristics
No Sybils
No farming
No task system
No points
In other words: if you used the product → you get paid. The essence is Protocol ownership, not Marketing.
Phase 2 (2021): ENS era — “Users own the protocol”
Representative projects
ENS
DYDX
Gitcoin
The most iconic one: ENS (2021)
This is a milestone-level airdrop because it was the first time it clearly proposed:
Users are not users
Users are shareholders
ENS distributes governance tokens to users who hold .eth domain names for DAO governance.
Why is ENS especially important?
Because it established: Web3’s political system, not its financial system.
ENS’s three long-term impacts
Almost every protocol now has: a governance token
For example:
Holding a domain name
Using the protocol
Participating in governance
Not just simple DeFi wash trading volume.
This line started with ENS:
users → owners
Phase 3 (2022–2023): Airdrops became a growth hacking tool
This is: the most critical turning point
Airdrops shifted from: rewarding users to: acquiring users
Representative projects
All the items in the list below belong to this phase:
Aptos
Arbitrum
Starknet
Celestia
Aptos (2022)
This is: the standardization of the testnet airdrop model
Characteristics:
You need to run the testnet
You need to test claiming the NFT
You need to run a node
It distributed roughly $430M worth of tokens to testnet users. I only spent 5 minutes binding my Google account and Discord account, and got 150 APT tokens worth $1,700 in an airdrop.
Key change
This was the first time: technical contributions = airdrop, not using a Dapp.
Arbitrum (2023)
This is: the largest-scale L2 airdrop
Value was close to: $2B USD.
Arbitrum made a key innovation:
Multi-tier scoring
For example:
bridge
transaction
liquidity
DAO voting
This directly led to: airdrops becoming financialized—because you can optimize your wallet address behavior to increase your airdrop weight.
Celestia (2023)
This is: the modular blockchain narrative airdrop
The airdrop recipients include:
Cosmos stakers
Rollup developers
Ethereum users
And it distributed about: $730M USD.
Key change
This was the first time there was a cross-ecosystem airdrop, not a single-chain airdrop.
Starknet (2024)
This is one of the most controversial airdrops, because it was the first time it began large-scale filtering of users based on a balance condition, and added standards with multi-dimensional opacity.
For example:
GitHub developer
Ethereum staker
contributor
And about 50 million STRK were allocated to an early community member plan.
Key change
This was the first time: identity-based (identity-oriented)
Not: activity-based (behavior-oriented).
Phase 4 (2024–2026): The Points economy era
This is: the current era.
Core mechanism:
Points system
For example:
Blur — earn points by trading NFTs with staked ETH
Blast — earn points by earning ETH
EigenLayer — earn points by restaking
LayerZero — long-term interaction records
Scroll — complete tasks to earn Points
Now: everything you see today is actually not an airdrop.
Instead, it’s a pre-airdrop incentive system (airdrop warming mechanism).
Key change
Airdrops are no longer about completing tasks, but about locking funds. Now the core metrics are:
TVL
duration
liquidity
Not:
transaction count
Modern airdrops increasingly rely on points systems to measure user loyalty and deposit time. But after depositing, funds can be stolen; and because time redundancy leads to deposit losses, the final airdrop can even be less than the principal.
Monad: a very typical “attention-driven airdrop”
Monad’s core isn’t technology. It’s: Attention engineering (attention-driven design).
The testnet has hundreds of millions of addresses, but it’s not product-driven—it’s social-driven. This is the key characteristic of the next generation of airdrops.
If you participate in a lot of address interactions, it’s useless—you need to gain the project team’s recognition, get a Discord role, have influence on social media to get a Monad Card, earn nominations, and keep developing toward something like private-community engagement rather than just simple interaction.
Why do almost all projects need to do airdrops now?
The answer is simple: airdrops are the cheapest way to acquire users.
Traditional methods: Google Ads
Cost: $50–$200 per user
Airdrop method: send tokens
Cost: 0 (theoretically)
So airdrops become a growth tool rather than a reward.
The real economics of airdrops (most people don’t realize)
This is the most important part. Many airdrop projects show: first it goes up → then there’s mass selling.
For example:
ENS
dYdX
STRK
Driven by market enthusiasm, prices rise quickly, but then clearly retrace due to selling pressure.
This is called: Airdrop Dump Cycle
Process:
Airdrop (airdrop
Price spike (massive surge)
Dump (crash)
Stabilization (stabilization
This is something that almost every airdrop project goes through. So if you have an airdrop, you need to think about a better time window to sell—rather than just FOMO or FUD.
The future of airdrops: 5 trends—this is my core judgment.
For example:
Arbitrum
Starknet
zkSync
Scroll
They’ve basically all done it; in the future, only ecosystem airdrops remain.
For example:
Lending
Restaking
NFT infra
So I believe future opportunities mainly come from ecosystem protocols, not from the chain itself.
For example:
staking
restaking
liquidity mining
The essence: Yield (lending/borrowing), not reward.
Previously $0; now $1000+ is just the entry level. In the future it may even be $10000+, because Sybil (Sybil) costs are rising.
A lot has already happened—for example, automated chat and automated trading. So in the future, project teams may use:
on-chain reputation (on-chain scoring)
behavioral pattern (user behavior)
identity graph (identity map)
All of these will depend on whether you can claim the airdrop, rather than relying on a single way to connect and claim.
Not a technical competition—who can attract users.
The airdrop types most worth watching in the future (2026)
Tier 1 (most likely to generate large-scale airdrops) examples:
Monad
Eclipse
Berachain
Movement
Tier 2 (medium-sized airdrops)
restaking
lending
derivatives
Tier 3 (small but frequent)
DEX
NFT infra
social
Final summary (core viewpoint)
If I had to summarize it, it’s:
2020: Airdrops are rewards
2021: Airdrops are user entitlements
2022: Airdrops are growth
2023: Airdrops are trading
2024–2025: Airdrops are finance
2026: Airdrops are attention
What you need to do is:
1# Give up pointless testnet farming
2# Participate in the project team’s testnet nodes or technical contributions
3# Participate in the project team’s clearly defined task system for airdrops
4# Participate in systems that clearly award Points, such as staking and trading
5# Be active in the Discord community to earn an identity for community contributions
6# Keep using the product and deeply participate—long-term mindset
7# Build on-chain identity, and keep your Web2 identity active
Since Web3 airdrops began with the Uniswap genesis event in 2020, they’ve evolved from a simple “use equals reward” model into a complex system of behavior incentives, identity verification, and attention-based economics. From ENS clearly stating that users are protocol shareholders, to projects like Aptos and Arbitrum optimizing airdrop weights through multi-dimensional scoring, and now to the Points system and attention-driven design—airdrop’s essence is no longer just token distribution, but a tool for long-term participation, community building, and value recognition.
For long-term participants and newcomers alike, airdrops still contain opportunities, but the strategy must upgrade: give up simple farming, deeply participate in testnets and node contributions, complete task systems, actively stake and interact, and build influence in the community. By doing so, you can not only potentially get high-quality airdrops—you can also truly become part of the protocol’s ecosystem.
Although blanket-style airdrops have cooled off significantly, threshold-based, task mining, and hybrid models are on the rise—emphasizing real usage and long-term value. This means that as long as your approach is right and your strategy is long-term, airdrops remain a viable path to securing early entitlements and participating in innovative ecosystems. The future belongs to those who understand on-chain identity, contribution value, and attention economics—opportunities in the airdrop industry have never really disappeared.
In short, airdrops have evolved from rewards → user entitlements → growth → trading → finance → attention, becoming a core tool for Web3 user acquisition, governance, and community building—while the core capabilities of the future will be identity, contribution, attention, and long-term participation.