#signdigitalsovereigninfra $SIGN
Sign Protocol caught my attention for a very simple reason.
By the time the token became something people actually wanted to trade, the project was already projecting around $15 million in revenue for 2024 and had raised roughly $16 million overall. In crypto, that order feels unusual. Most teams launch a token first and then spend months trying to build a real business around it. Here, it felt like the business came first—and the token followed later.
That shift changes how I look at the entire setup.
When the holder program went live on March 20, the conversation quickly moved where it always does in this market: wallet activity, positioning, who’s holding, who’s rotating, who got in early. But instead of overshadowing everything else, it made the earlier detail stand out even more. The token felt less like the starting point and more like a visible layer of something that was already functioning underneath.
That’s probably why it feels a bit different to me.
Not necessarily cleaner. Not necessarily safer. Just more difficult to ignore in the usual way.
And I still think most people noticed it in the wrong order.