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Camp Network's Airdrop Mechanism Under Fire: Why Early Contributors Face Unprecedented Barriers
The much-anticipated mainnet launch of Camp Network, the L1 project that secured $30 million in funding to tackle AI copyright challenges, has instead become a cautionary tale in token distribution. What community members hoped would reward their testnet participation has transformed into one of the crypto space’s most scrutinized airdrop events.
The Eligibility Paradox: 6 Million Participants, 40,000 Winners
The numbers tell a stark story. Camp Network’s testnet attracted approximately 6 million wallet interactions, with 280,000 wallets classified as active participants in the Summit Series. Yet when airdrop eligibility checks began on August 22, only 40,000 addresses qualified for token claims.
For the vast majority of early contributors who spent months completing testnet tasks and providing ecosystem feedback, the realization struck hard: participation alone wasn’t enough. Prior NFT minting or substantial referral activities were required—a requirement that wasn’t prominently communicated during the testnet phase.
The Hidden Cost Trap: When Claiming Tokens Requires Buying Tokens
The first shock came when eligible recipients discovered they needed to pay 0.0025 ETH (approximately $10) as a registration fee—making Camp Network the inaugural mainstream L1 project to charge users for airdrop participation. Community backlash was swift and severe, forcing the team to reverse the decision and promise full refunds by afternoon.
But this was merely the entry fee. The deeper issue emerged at token unlock: while TGE released 100% of claimable tokens, only 20% unlocked immediately. For an early recipient holding 100 CAMP tokens worth around $0.01 per token, the initial unlock yielded just $0.20—insufficient even to cover gas fees on the mainnet.
This creates a perverse economic trap: to claim their airdrop, users must first purchase CAMP tokens on spot exchanges to fund the transaction. Complicating matters further, certain major exchanges listing CAMP cannot yet process token withdrawals, effectively locking newly purchased coins and preventing users from covering their own claim costs.
Verification Barriers and Global Exclusion
The final obstacle is the stringent KYC certification. Camp Network’s identity verification system operates with camera requirements and active VPN blocks, a combination that has systematically excluded international users from completing the claim process.
Combined with the participation eligibility hurdles, the extended fee structure, and the bootstrap paradox of needing to buy coins to claim coins, Camp Network has constructed perhaps the most friction-laden airdrop mechanism in recent L1 history.
The Broader Risk Signal
This design raises fundamental questions about token distribution philosophy and project development priorities. Whether participants should proceed with CAMP exposure requires careful assessment of both the mechanism’s fairness implications and the token’s broader utility thesis. The layered restrictions suggest significant control dynamics that warrant deeper due diligence before any trading decisions.