A brief summary
A brief summary

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The crypto ecosystem is at crossroads. In the past three years, we’ve spent our resoruces launching new protocols, new smart contracts, and new applications, and yet, mainstream adoption eludes us.
With every new protocol or contract created, users face more noise when using crypto. If new users can’t filter through the noise, users won’t be using decentralized applications. And if new users aren’t using decentralized applications, we’re stuck with the financial system we have today that is controlled by just a few.
Meanwhile, crypto networks are trying to figure out how to effectively decentralize and turn speculators into users. Recently, we’ve seen a resurgence in projects launching tokens for their ecosystems. Projects are quickly moving from “buying to own” to “participating to govern.” But in most cases, these projects suffer from the chicken and the egg problem: there must be users participating to govern.
How can we help filter the noise for new users, turn speculators into participants, and make crypto networks more decentralized? Introducing Rabbit Hole — Earn rewards by using decentralized applications
On RabbitHole, users can acquire XP, level up, and earn rewards for interacting with well-known blockchain protocols. RabbitHole breaks down each decentralized application into gamified tasks so users can understand the main functions of the application while simultaneously bootstrapping the network.
The crypto ecosystem is at crossroads. In the past three years, we’ve spent our resoruces launching new protocols, new smart contracts, and new applications, and yet, mainstream adoption eludes us.
With every new protocol or contract created, users face more noise when using crypto. If new users can’t filter through the noise, users won’t be using decentralized applications. And if new users aren’t using decentralized applications, we’re stuck with the financial system we have today that is controlled by just a few.
Meanwhile, crypto networks are trying to figure out how to effectively decentralize and turn speculators into users. Recently, we’ve seen a resurgence in projects launching tokens for their ecosystems. Projects are quickly moving from “buying to own” to “participating to govern.” But in most cases, these projects suffer from the chicken and the egg problem: there must be users participating to govern.
How can we help filter the noise for new users, turn speculators into participants, and make crypto networks more decentralized? Introducing Rabbit Hole — Earn rewards by using decentralized applications
On RabbitHole, users can acquire XP, level up, and earn rewards for interacting with well-known blockchain protocols. RabbitHole breaks down each decentralized application into gamified tasks so users can understand the main functions of the application while simultaneously bootstrapping the network.
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