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Honestly, in the past everyone considered APENFT as a "vase project" for showcasing art pieces, with price fluctuations depending on market sentiment. But after rebranding to AINFT this year, the entire approach has changed — it's not just about changing the logo, but about rewriting the underlying rules.
The current logic is straightforward: the $NFT token is no longer just a tool for voting; it has become the "energy supply" for the entire AI ecosystem. Want to play with AI applications on the Grid platform? You need to burn NFTs. This shift from governance tokens to consumable assets directly redefines its value anchoring method. Previously backed by sentiment and art, now driven by actual usage demand. When the model changes, the valuation logic naturally follows.
To be honest, after renaming to AINFT, it’s truly different. It finally has practical use.
Burn NFTs to play with AI? I can get behind that logic. It’s more reliable than pure hype.
Transforming from a voting tool to an energy source—this change is quite interesting.
It was just an art piece shell before; now it finally has real demand.
The valuation logic has changed, and that’s true value reshaping.
No longer just a vase that depends on the market sentiment; it’s finally standing up.
The AI ecosystem energy supply setup indeed changes the entire game rules.
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Wait, isn't this turning coins from air tokens into consumables? Sounds pretty good?
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Burn NFTs to use AI applications? That really depends on the user base; otherwise, it's just spinning wheels.
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Changing the name and the underlying rules completely shifts the game. It sounds a bit aggressive, but can it hold up?
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From governance to consumption, this logic is essentially about enforced demand. Whether it can be sustained is indeed questionable.
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No, this is just finding a use case for NFTs, provided that Grid can really become popular.
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The operation is good, but it depends on subsequent implementation; don’t let it become just another air project.
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Honestly, if this really comes to fruition, the logic would be self-consistent.
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Burning tokens to drive demand sounds a bit like a deflationary model, but the key is whether Grid can actually deliver something.
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From governance to consumption, this seems to be the true nature that tokens should have.
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Can renaming really change fate? I still need to see actual user data before making a judgment.
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The energy supply analogy is good, but only if people are actually using it.
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Another story of "this time it's different," let's observe for half a year before deciding.
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Starting over with rules sounds impressive, but what substantial changes have actually been made?
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If a usage demand cycle can really be established, this logic is far more powerful than just voting rights.
From the perspective of energy supply, this transformation has some potential.
But it depends on whether the Grid platform can really take off; otherwise, NFTs will continue to depreciate.
The key still depends on whether the actual burn volume of the Grid ecosystem can support the valuation; data speaks for itself.
Here's a different approach: this kind of token transitioning from governance to consumption has a much clearer ROI logic.
In simple terms, it's shifting from speculation to practicality, but the sustainability of usage demand needs to be verified.
Interesting, it's akin to transforming tokens from investment assets into production materials, and the efficiency boost is indeed different.
Renaming is just a cover-up; the key is finding real use cases.
Wait, can Grid's demand truly support this? Or is it another wave of farming new investors?
It sounds a bit like a comeback, but the prerequisite is that NFTs are genuinely burned.
Anyway, I'm skeptical. Let's wait and see.
Wait, if that's the case, the holding costs will have to increase, and all the previously accumulated tokens need to be reconsidered.
It's a naked demand-driven approach, much more reliable than just emotional appeal.
Could it be that the traffic on Grid has really picked up? Otherwise, burning tokens would be pointless.
So the current question is, what exactly can be created through burning?