Building Culture Over Charts
My (Unpopular) Opinion
If you spend enough time in any crypto-native community, you’ll notice a familiar pattern emerge. Conversations that start with good intentions slowly collapse into one recurring theme: token price. Hive is no exception.
To be clear up front, this is not an attack, a callout, or a declaration of who is right or wrong. It’s simply an observation from someone still relatively new to the ecosystem, offering perspective rather than certainty.
What follows is less about price itself and more about what happens to a platform when price becomes the dominant lens through which everything else is judged.
Hyperfocus on Token Price Hurts $Hive More Than It Helps
From what you can see early on, Hive functions primarily as a social network, a blogging platform, and a gaming community layer. Those are the core products. The blockchain and token exist to support and enhance that experience, not to replace it.
In many ways, Hive resembles platforms that have existed successfully for decades without native tokens. Think Medium for blogging, gaming guilds for coordination and competition, or social platforms built entirely on attention and participation. These systems did not require a speculative asset at their center to create value for users.
Hive adds something powerful on top of that model. Ownership, permissionless participation, and aligned incentives. But those are benefits layered onto an already viable product. They are not the product itself.
When discussion shifts too heavily toward token price, it reframes Hive as a financial instrument rather than a place people actually want to spend time.
Culture Flows Downstream From Power Users
Every online ecosystem develops a culture, whether intentionally or not. That culture is shaped most strongly by its most active and visible participants.
If power users focus primarily on price action, yield, and short-term returns, newer users will assume that is what Hive is about. Over time, that mentality trickles down and becomes normalized. Engagement shifts from creation to extraction. Participation becomes transactional.
If power users treat Hive as a place to build, write, experiment, play games, and form communities, that mindset becomes contagious too.
Culture is not enforced by rules. It’s modeled by behavior.
The Same Trap Exists in Blockchain Gaming
This dynamic is even more obvious in blockchain-based games. Games that lead with earning potential rarely succeed long term. Development priorities become distorted. Key success points are defined by payouts rather than fun, usability, or retention. Players arrive for profit, not enjoyment, and leave the moment returns decline.
Strong games work the opposite way. They focus on building something people actually want to play. The economy exists to support engagement, not replace it.
Monetization is an inherent part of most blockchain products, and there’s nothing wrong with that. Establishing sustainable tokenomics matters, but once that foundation exists, obsessing over price does not improve the product; it distracts from it.
Create Desire; Revenue Follows
Across nearly every industry, this principle holds true:
- Create a product people genuinely enjoy using
- Build something worth returning to
- Foster a community people want to be part of
When these elements are present, monetization tends to follow naturally.
Hive already has many of the ingredients needed to thrive without price being the focal point of engagement. Strong writers. Active communities. Games, tools, and social layers that reward participation rather than passive holding.
Surprisingly, the healthiest thing for the token long term may be talking about it less and building around it more.
Final Thoughts
This isn’t a dismissal of token discourse, and it isn’t a claim of authority. Price matters. Economics matter. Sustainability matters. But when they dominate the conversation, they can quietly undermine the very thing that gives the token value in the first place.
Hive does not need to be reduced to a chart to succeed. If it continues to be treated as a place worth building and participating in, the rest will take care of itself.
That’s just my own humble perspective as a newcomer to this amazing network & community.
Take it for what it’s worth.
About the Author
My name is Jordan, also known as CRVNE.eth. I reside in the United States in Orange County, California. Professionally, I work as the operations manager of a lead generation agency focused on high-volume inbound calls for call centers. Alongside that role, I build CRMs, automation workflows, and email campaigns for businesses. I’ve been involved in crypto and Web3 for over a decade, with interests spanning blockchain infrastructure, gaming, and community-driven projects.
If you would like to know more check out my intro post:
@crvne.eth/who-i-am-and-why-im-here-on-hive