When discussing the prospects of DeFi, people usually focus on whether APY can be higher and transaction speeds faster. But there's a more interesting perspective worth pondering: in the future, the flow of funds might no longer be determined by a series of operational commands, but rather driven by users' genuine "intent." This is not just a technological iteration; fundamentally, it is a reshaping of the economic model—industry insiders call it the "Intent Economy."
In this new system, users' needs themselves become the commodities. Solvers compete with each other to earn the opportunity to fulfill these needs; the highest bidder wins, and upon successful completion, they receive corresponding rewards. Some projects have already built such decentralized intent market frameworks.
So, how does token circulation work within this ecosystem? There are mainly three dimensions:
**Priority Bidding**—For complex or urgent orders, users may need to pay extra fees to get ahead. This method allows pricing to be entirely determined by market demand, making it dynamic and efficient.
**Staking + Reputation Mechanism**—If a solver stakes a large amount of tokens and has a good track record, they can earn a higher reputation score, thereby gaining access to more high-quality orders. Tokens become a "credit certificate," directly reflecting the reliability of the node.
**Fee Distribution Ecosystem**—The protocol's collected fees are distributed in multiple ways: some incentivize outstanding solvers, some are used to buy back and burn tokens to support the token price, and the rest go into the community treasury to build the ecosystem. This closed-loop logic creates a virtuous cycle.
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GasFeeNightmare
· 9h ago
The intention economy sounds sophisticated, but frankly, it's just a new way to scam retail investors.
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QuorumVoter
· 01-11 04:51
The intention economy sounds good, but the real question is whether Solver will become centralized into a new MEV harvesting machine.
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GetRichLeek
· 01-11 01:56
Intent economy? Sounds like another new money-grabbing scheme, with staking + reputation mechanisms. To put it simply, it's still about big players locking up tokens to drive up the price.
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TommyTeacher1
· 01-11 01:56
The logic of the intention economy sounds good, but when it comes to actual implementation, will the competition among Solvers evolve into a new MEV squeeze battlefield?
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CodeAuditQueen
· 01-11 01:55
The intent market model sounds good, but can the solver's reputation mechanism really prevent sybil attacks? Is staking enough?
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CryptoGoldmine
· 01-11 01:55
The logic of the intention economy is indeed deeper than simply stacking APY. The staking reputation mechanism essentially brings the computing power competition to the protocol layer, which is quite interesting.
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OnchainArchaeologist
· 01-11 01:40
It's another case of the intention economy. It sounds good, but I just want to ask one question—will Solver truly facilitate fair bidding, or will it once again be monopolized by big players?
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gas_fee_therapist
· 01-11 01:28
The intention economy sounds great, but the real question is—who will ensure that those Solvers won't rug?
When discussing the prospects of DeFi, people usually focus on whether APY can be higher and transaction speeds faster. But there's a more interesting perspective worth pondering: in the future, the flow of funds might no longer be determined by a series of operational commands, but rather driven by users' genuine "intent." This is not just a technological iteration; fundamentally, it is a reshaping of the economic model—industry insiders call it the "Intent Economy."
In this new system, users' needs themselves become the commodities. Solvers compete with each other to earn the opportunity to fulfill these needs; the highest bidder wins, and upon successful completion, they receive corresponding rewards. Some projects have already built such decentralized intent market frameworks.
So, how does token circulation work within this ecosystem? There are mainly three dimensions:
**Priority Bidding**—For complex or urgent orders, users may need to pay extra fees to get ahead. This method allows pricing to be entirely determined by market demand, making it dynamic and efficient.
**Staking + Reputation Mechanism**—If a solver stakes a large amount of tokens and has a good track record, they can earn a higher reputation score, thereby gaining access to more high-quality orders. Tokens become a "credit certificate," directly reflecting the reliability of the node.
**Fee Distribution Ecosystem**—The protocol's collected fees are distributed in multiple ways: some incentivize outstanding solvers, some are used to buy back and burn tokens to support the token price, and the rest go into the community treasury to build the ecosystem. This closed-loop logic creates a virtuous cycle.