A 9.5% drop—this is $WLD ’s performance today. It’s now at $0.379.
But this isn’t the most interesting number from today.
The most interesting part is that $WLD unlocks $64.9 million worth of tokens every single day. Not this week, not this month—every day, all year long, continuing until 2027.
Where does this token model come from? Worldcoin designed a mechanism to distribute tokens to everyone globally via iris scanning—supposedly a universal system for identity allocation for all humanity. But in practice, the result is: fresh tokens keep entering circulation, and the buy-side has to absorb this pressure every day, otherwise the price falls.
$WLD has dropped from its 2024 peak of over $10 down to the current $0.38—a 96% decline.
I’ve seen two completely opposite viewpoints:
One is: it’s undervalued. Sam Altman is one of the most influential AI entrepreneurs in the world, and Worldcoin is the infrastructure for identity verification in the next decade of the AI era. $0.38 is an opportunity to build a position.
The other is: it’s a carefully packaged inflation machine. The token design failed; the project team is the biggest seller for the long run, and there’s no reason for the price to stabilize.
My personal take: both are partly right, but each is biased. The direction is correct—there’s a real need for biometric identity verification in the AI era, and in the next 10 years this space will most likely produce something. But the economic model for $WLD ’s token is indeed problematic. The inflation pressure from daily unlocks is a math problem—faith can’t solve it.
A story with the right direction doesn’t necessarily support a token price that’s continuously pressured downward by daily supply.
In the short term: $0.35 is support—if it breaks, there’s not much to say. $0.42 is resistance—only after it’s cleared does it start to look better. Which side are you on: lofty ideals, or the inflation trap?
But this isn’t the most interesting number from today.
The most interesting part is that $WLD unlocks $64.9 million worth of tokens every single day. Not this week, not this month—every day, all year long, continuing until 2027.
Where does this token model come from? Worldcoin designed a mechanism to distribute tokens to everyone globally via iris scanning—supposedly a universal system for identity allocation for all humanity. But in practice, the result is: fresh tokens keep entering circulation, and the buy-side has to absorb this pressure every day, otherwise the price falls.
$WLD has dropped from its 2024 peak of over $10 down to the current $0.38—a 96% decline.
I’ve seen two completely opposite viewpoints:
One is: it’s undervalued. Sam Altman is one of the most influential AI entrepreneurs in the world, and Worldcoin is the infrastructure for identity verification in the next decade of the AI era. $0.38 is an opportunity to build a position.
The other is: it’s a carefully packaged inflation machine. The token design failed; the project team is the biggest seller for the long run, and there’s no reason for the price to stabilize.
My personal take: both are partly right, but each is biased. The direction is correct—there’s a real need for biometric identity verification in the AI era, and in the next 10 years this space will most likely produce something. But the economic model for $WLD ’s token is indeed problematic. The inflation pressure from daily unlocks is a math problem—faith can’t solve it.
A story with the right direction doesn’t necessarily support a token price that’s continuously pressured downward by daily supply.
In the short term: $0.35 is support—if it breaks, there’s not much to say. $0.42 is resistance—only after it’s cleared does it start to look better. Which side are you on: lofty ideals, or the inflation trap?
