I recently took a look at the $US token design by Talus Labs, and honestly, I was quite surprised.
Many projects like to make their tokenomics complicated—with high inflation, exaggerated APY, or letting early investors dump like crazy as soon as trading starts. But $US is nothing like that.
Its supply is fixed at 10 billion tokens, with an inflation rate of 0%. There’s no minting mechanism; all value relies on demand generated by agent activity within the network. This kind of design actually leans more toward long-termism, avoiding those short-term gimmicks.
Looking at the token distribution and unlock schedule, it also seems pretty stable. The entire flywheel logic is: the more active the agents are, the greater the demand for $US , and naturally, the value goes up.
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MoonRocketTeam
· 12-05 08:45
Oh, 0% inflation is really rare, but it still depends on whether the agent ecosystem can actually take off.
Without knowing the actual trading depth, it still feels a bit uncertain. After all, the demand side is the key. [thinking]
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SmartContractDiver
· 12-05 08:26
Can this zero inflation strategy really hold up? I'm just worried that the agent activity might not keep up later on.
I recently took a look at the $US token design by Talus Labs, and honestly, I was quite surprised.
Many projects like to make their tokenomics complicated—with high inflation, exaggerated APY, or letting early investors dump like crazy as soon as trading starts. But $US is nothing like that.
Its supply is fixed at 10 billion tokens, with an inflation rate of 0%. There’s no minting mechanism; all value relies on demand generated by agent activity within the network. This kind of design actually leans more toward long-termism, avoiding those short-term gimmicks.
Looking at the token distribution and unlock schedule, it also seems pretty stable. The entire flywheel logic is: the more active the agents are, the greater the demand for $US , and naturally, the value goes up.