Recently, interactive airdrops have almost become unviable, and the three-piece set (Google/Twitter/Discord) is also difficult to sell.

Some websites that even create interactive tools are suspected of running away—some have applied for refunds and have not received them for two months, and the risks are increasing.

In contrast, node-based airdrops are more stable, more valuable, and more reliable:

Participatory costs are controllable (one machine producing long-term, not relying on bulk accounts)

Returns are more certain (official incentives, mainnet airdrops, continuous rewards)

Less likely to be abused (basically no witch risk)

Low risk of platform shutdown (real network construction, not web interaction)

If you still want to steadily participate in Web3 opportunities, node-based airdrops are now the main focus.