By 2026, one thing is clear. Community matters more than code.
Many strong projects failed because no one used them. Good technology alone is not enough. Without people, it has no value.
Sign understands this well.
Instead of focusing only on building technology, they focus on building participation. A good example is the Orange Dynasty.
At first, it sounds like just a name. But inside, it works like a system where people stay active. There are groups, rankings, and daily rewards. People are not just watching, they are involved.
And it worked fast.
Within two weeks of launch, it brought in hundreds of thousands of users. This was not random hype. People were actually participating and contributing.
This connects to how Sign works.
It uses attestations, which means users must prove real actions. It is not about fake activity. You need to actually do something to earn value.
Then comes the token.
SIGN has a large supply, but the way it is released is controlled. Only a small portion was available at the start. The rest is distributed slowly over time.
Investors and team members cannot sell early. Their tokens are locked for years. This keeps them committed and reduces sudden selling pressure.
The token is also useful.
It is used for transactions, features, and governance. You can stake it, vote with it, and earn rewards. It is not just something you hold and wait.
Sign also operates at scale.
It has already handled millions of attestations and distributed tokens to millions of wallets. This shows real usage, not just promises.
In simple terms, Sign is building something that people use, not just something people talk about.