Once heralded as the next big thing in Web3, decentralized physical infrastructure networks seemed poised to revolutionize how we think about resource sharing and incentive mechanisms. Yet lately, the conversation has quieted considerably.
DePIN projects promised to tokenize real-world infrastructure—from computing power to bandwidth to sensor networks. The vision was compelling: reward participants directly for contributing physical resources, bypassing traditional intermediaries.
But here's where things get fuzzy. Market sentiment has shifted. Many projects that launched with considerable hype now struggle to maintain traction. Token prices have cooled. User adoption hasn't matched early expectations. The infrastructure buildout moves slower than anticipated.
So is DePIN genuinely dead, or just maturing? Perhaps it's somewhere in between—the space is consolidating, separating serious projects from speculative ones. Real utility cases are emerging, but they're fewer and more niche than the hype cycle suggested.
The honest take: DePIN isn't dead. It's just entering a much harder phase where execution matters far more than narrative.
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PumpStrategist
· 01-16 09:55
The chips are highly concentrated in leading projects, and the bottom retail investors have already been wiped out. This wave of DePIN is not dead; it's just that retail investors have been replaced by institutions. Just look at the trading volume to understand.
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OnchainArchaeologist
· 01-15 12:05
Hey, it's another bear market shakeout... DePIN was just a bubble to begin with, so it's normal now that it burst.
The projects that can truly survive have already been quietly working behind the scenes, without the need to hype on social media every day.
What does it mean when the token cools off? It just means that retail investors chasing after air coins have been wiped out.
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SeasonedInvestor
· 01-15 11:59
It's another story of "not dead, just fixing," basically meaning after a round of liquidation, it's time to wake up.
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GateUser-addcaaf7
· 01-13 15:24
Haha, another story of "not dead, just sleeping"... The token has been cold for half a year, and you're still talking about maturation?
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UncommonNPC
· 01-13 12:53
Another overhyped track, is it starting to "mature" now? Basically, it just means the retail investors have been squeezed dry.
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GweiTooHigh
· 01-13 12:53
Another story of "not dead, just adjusting"... Tired of hearing it, brother. In this wave of DePIN, it either really delivers something or it’s game over.
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QuorumVoter
· 01-13 12:50
Oh no, it's another saying of "It didn't die, it's just in hibernation"... I've heard it too many times.
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AirdropBuffet
· 01-13 12:49
Another story of "not dead, just in hibernation," sounds nice, but the coin price tells the truth.
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ForkYouPayMe
· 01-13 12:48
To be honest, this wave of DePIN has been overhyped. Now it's time to get serious and do the work. Projects whose token prices drop and reveal their true nature deserve to be eliminated; only truly useful things will naturally survive.
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governance_lurker
· 01-13 12:48
To be honest, the DePIN wave was blown out of proportion. Now that things have calmed down, it's actually a good thing. Projects that only tell stories should have died long ago, while those with real substance now have more room to grow.
Has DePIN Lost Its Momentum?
Once heralded as the next big thing in Web3, decentralized physical infrastructure networks seemed poised to revolutionize how we think about resource sharing and incentive mechanisms. Yet lately, the conversation has quieted considerably.
DePIN projects promised to tokenize real-world infrastructure—from computing power to bandwidth to sensor networks. The vision was compelling: reward participants directly for contributing physical resources, bypassing traditional intermediaries.
But here's where things get fuzzy. Market sentiment has shifted. Many projects that launched with considerable hype now struggle to maintain traction. Token prices have cooled. User adoption hasn't matched early expectations. The infrastructure buildout moves slower than anticipated.
So is DePIN genuinely dead, or just maturing? Perhaps it's somewhere in between—the space is consolidating, separating serious projects from speculative ones. Real utility cases are emerging, but they're fewer and more niche than the hype cycle suggested.
The honest take: DePIN isn't dead. It's just entering a much harder phase where execution matters far more than narrative.