Data vs. Reality: Are we biting the hand that feeds us?
November 2025 is behind us. If we look at the charts, we see a clear trend: the ecosystem is shrinking. But if we dig deeper, we find a paradox. While the user base declines, the rewards distributed by curators remain constant.
Let's start with the hard facts.
📅 Part 1: The Numbers (The Trend)
There is no other way to say it: the social layer of Hive is contracting. We are currently seeing the lowest activity levels of the last 12 months.
The Yearly Drop
First, let's look at the macro view. The drop since the peak in May 2025 is undeniable.
| Period | Active Users | Posters | Posts | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024-12 | 15,045 | 11,037 | 76,955 | 241,442 |
| 2025-05 (Peak) | 17,878 | 7,388 | 74,711 | 264,695 |
| 2025-09 | 13,735 | 6,419 | 65,306 | 221,456 |
| 2025-10 | 8,100 | 6,617 | 62,575 | 199,656 |
| 2025-11 | 7,227 | 5,765 | 54,753 | 168,652 |
The Daily Reality (November)
Here is the daily breakdown for November. The number of active posters now hovers around 1,500 per day.
| Date | Active Users | Posters | Posts | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025-11-01 | 2372 | 1540 | 1863 | 6402 |
| 2025-11-05 | 2383 | 1591 | 1865 | 5940 |
| 2025-11-10 | 2419 | 1630 | 1980 | 6381 |
| 2025-11-15 | 2266 | 1510 | 1776 | 5397 |
| 2025-11-20 | 2290 | 1501 | 1812 | 5165 |
| 2025-11-25 | 2315 | 1563 | 1884 | 5525 |
| 2025-11-30 | 2061 | 1330 | 1536 | 4483 |
(Selected dates for readability, the trend is consistent)
The Conclusion: The "noise" is fading. Many casual users have left. Only the core remains.
🐋 Part 2: The "Smart Money" & My Personal Reality
Here is the interesting part. While users are leaving, the Curators (the accounts with voting power) are still performing as usual.
The Top 10 Curators alone cast 22,932 votes in November.
| Curator | Votes (Total) | Avg/Day | Diversity | Total HP Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| appreciator | 3342 | 111.4 | 24.2% | 94,205 HP |
| ocdb | 2534 | 84.5 | 33.1% | 38,709 HP |
| curangel | 3026 | 100.9 | 31.4% | 19,791 HP |
| leo.voter | 1839 | 61.3 | 18.7% | 18,084 HP |
| ecency | 7244 | 241.5 | 19.2% | 14,223 HP |
| TOTAL (Top 10) | 22,932 | 764.4 | 11.6% | 192,875 HP |
Together, they inject roughly 192,000 HP in value into the system every month.
Statistically, with fewer posts and constant voting power, I should have a roughly 30% chance of being upvoted.
The Painful Truth (No "Added Value")
However, statistics are not reality.
Personally, I rarely get a curation vote.
I do get an upvote from leo.voter on about 40% of my posts published via InLeo, but let's be honest: that is because I am a Premium Member. It is a perk of a subscription, not necessarily a badge of quality.
But the organic curators? The accounts listed above? They ignore me.
That probably means that the curator accounts don't see any added value in my posts.
Probably because I don't use the popular tags (like #photography, #travel, or specific community tags).
Should I cry now?
No, I don't care to be honest. I write because I like it. But it is a stark reminder that "added value" on Hive is defined by a very small group of people.
🛑 Part 3: The Economic Reality (The Sell Wall)
There is a deeper economic issue. Where does that 192,000 HP go after it is paid out?
Too much of it flows directly to exchanges or is converted into other crypto.
Services like reward.app have become popular because they allow users to bypass the vesting period and get liquid Hive immediately.
Every token that is "earned" and immediately offered on the exchanges just adds to the Sell Wall.
- The larger the sell wall, the harder it is for the price to move up.
- The lower the price, the less attractive the ecosystem becomes to investors.
By constantly extracting liquidity without reinvesting (Powering Up), the community is effectively biting the hand that feeds it. At the current pace, Hive risks turning into a "Penny Stock"—a network with high activity but very little value per unit.
🍻 Conclusion: The "Cheers" Effect
With a shrinking and "bleeding" user base, Hive is changing character. It will turn into the bar from the sitcom "Cheers":
"Where everybody knows your name."
- The Good: It's cozy. Engagement is personal.
- The Bad: A village without new blood slowly withers.
Meanwhile, the majority of the Hive blocks are filled with Splinterlands battles and automated actions, but that is a separate world from the bloggers.
I will keep writing, because I enjoy it. But we have to be realistic about the direction we are heading.
Cheers,
Peter
Data generated via HiveSQL & On-Chain Analysis