I fully agree with you that it is not a good idea to expect significant rewards from airdrops, especially when the community is in hundreds of millions and the supply of tokens is 100 Billion or even more. I also worked for 47 days in airdrop farming, this morning when I saw the result, it was quite disappointing. I am eligible for 500 Hamster tokens and the value is leass than $10 at current pre-market price. It is doubtful that its price will rise beyond $0.01, given the massive supply.
Do you think these guys who contributed to the development of the subscriber base through their referrals were not putting any efforts? Do you think the time each user committed on tapping and using their mind to solve the keys was doing it for the sake of getting a penny as an airdrop?
This has become a new scam wherein users join voluntarily to be part of a free airdrop but they get scammed when they have put so much effort in building the community and helping the team financially by contributing on their social media handles.
I don't support your theory or those of others who say that no one forced them to join the airdrop campaign. It is a lie as they as in the team pretended that they would airdrop a good amount of tokens whereas they lied with their calculation of the amount.
even if the numbers of users outnumbered what they expected, isn't it a reflection of the kind of engagement and referral they've enjoyed from miners that also saw to it that all thier social media handles are in millions of subscribers? What happens to the data you have to make use of while mining? What about the time and all the alternative jobs you had to forgo just to get a good amount of profit per hour?
It's really a disappointing result I'm seeing here with people that put in enough effort hoping that it will pay them well and at the end of the day, it's as though there is absolutely nothing to show for. From what I'm begining to understand, this is just like a mind game where they bring several project, allow one that has less number of participation to get good results and then the one people expect to pay them well turns out this way. I just pity those that did this hamster Kombat stuff till the end because I stopped mine mid way into it. If the payment for aidrop is excrude and participants can at least have the slightest knowledge on what they will get at the end of the task, it would have been better than putting so much effort into something you're not even sure of what the outcome will be and end up getting this disappointed at the end.