Token has become extremely popular, and the blockchain is very sad
Author: Gu Yu, ChianCatcher
Suddenly, Tokens have appeared in the public eye with unprecedented frequency. As the billing unit for various AI products, Tokens have become well-known alongside the explosive popularity of products like OpenClaw, ChatGPT, and Deepseek.
On March 24, the National Bureau of Statistics officially confirmed the Chinese translation of Token as "词元" (word element), and this news quickly spread across social media platforms like WeChat Moments and Douyin.
For practitioners in the blockchain industry, this is undoubtedly a bittersweet moment. Once upon a time, we struggled to explain to outsiders what a Token is, discussing decentralization, economic models, and consensus mechanisms at length; now, large models have completed a nationwide popularization of this term in just one year using a nearly blunt commercial logic.
Getting Tokens accepted by the public was once the long-cherished wish of all blockchain practitioners. Now, the vision has come true, but it leaves behind awkwardness. This is not only because "this Token is not that Token," but also because the "transformation of production relations" that blockchain once promised is now caught in an unprecedented crisis of faith.
I. The Evolution of Token Semantics: From Verification and Assets to "Computing Power Currency"
In the long history of computer science, Token is not a new term.
In the Web2 or earlier coding world, a Token was a "pass" used for login verification. It is an encrypted string obtained after logging into a server, proving "you are you." It quietly resides in the browser's Cookies or Headers, lacking social attributes and possessing only functional attributes.
In the Web3 world, Tokens have been endowed with an unprecedented grand narrative. They are translated as "代币" (tokens) or "通证" (certificates). In the context of blockchain, a Token is an asset, a ballot, ownership, and the glue of the community. We attempt to reconstruct the world through Tokens, believing they can break the monopoly of tech giants.
In the AI era, Tokens have transformed into the currency of computing power and the measurement unit for API calls. It is another way of saying electricity costs: the more you use, the more you pay; the smarter the model and the longer the output, the more terrifying the Token consumption.
II. The Struggles and Confusion of the Crypto Industry
Blockchain practitioners once had a grand ideal: "Tokenization of Everything," hoping to convert real-world assets, credit, and labor into Tokens for free circulation.
Ironically, AI has indeed achieved a certain form of "tokenization of everything," with text, sound, and video all decomposed into Tokens. For the public, they do not need to understand cryptographic principles, do not need to manage private keys, and do not need to worry about losing mnemonic phrases. They only need to input a Prompt, and the model will consume Tokens and output Tokens.
Getting Tokens widely accepted by the public was once the goal pursued by all practitioners in the blockchain industry. Now, the vision has come true, but it leaves behind awkwardness. This is not only because this Token is not that Token, but also because many practitioners themselves no longer believe in this goal and vision.
In recent years, as a form of tokens, Tokens have gained traction in various forms such as NFTs and memes due to their permissionless and low-threshold characteristics, but ultimately, with the collapse of prices, they have been labeled as "speculative" and "fraudulent" by the outside world.
Meanwhile, the blockchain industry's internal innovation drive has been insufficient, with conceptual projects like DePin, DeSci, AI agents, and RWA progressing slowly and having limited real-world applications. More and more crypto entrepreneurs are pausing their projects in confusion, either waiting for new opportunities or choosing to embrace the AI field, and capital is doing the same.
"As time goes by, I feel I have lost direction in the cryptocurrency field. After fully committing, the initial allure of cryptocurrency's transformative power has gradually faded. I am disappointed with the target audience I truly fought for. I completely misunderstood the difference between the true users of cryptocurrency and the promotional targets. Cryptocurrency claims to help decentralize the financial system, which I fully believe, but in reality, it is merely a super system of speculation and gambling, just a replica of the existing economy." In an article that went viral in the crypto industry a few months ago, former crypto entrepreneur Ken Chan wrote.
This entrepreneur's thoughts are not uncommon in the crypto industry; the struggle of faith and the loss of ideals continuously impact the psychology of crypto entrepreneurs during this bear market cycle. Although this is not the first time—such voices emerge every time the market turns bearish—this time, the strong rise of AI has made this crisis of faith particularly glaring.
III. The Second Half of Tokens
This may be the cruel logic of technological iteration: what truly changes the world is often not the grandest narrative but the most practical tools. Blockchain endowed Tokens with ideals, while AI endowed Tokens with necessity; blockchain wanted to change the world, but AI changed life first.
As AI's Tokens become the new "digital oil," blockchain can only watch its former dreams land in a completely unfamiliar way. This misaligned popularization is a victory for AI and the deepest helplessness for blockchain.
But there is good news; in the past year, assets like U.S. Treasury bonds and stocks in the Web2 world have also been rapidly tokenized, becoming one of the highest trading volume Token assets due to low trading thresholds and high convenience. As speculative bubbles burst one after another, and financial giants like BlackRock and Fidelity enter the scene, Tokens may be returning to the essence of being "value carriers."
You may also like

The large models in the United States are moving towards closure in the name of security

Morning Report | CoinEx becomes a key hub for Iran to evade sanctions, involving over $3.8 billion in funds; Kalshi seeks a new round of financing, with a valuation potentially rising to $40 billion

From the white-haired stock god to the billionaire fund mogul, the smart people shorting Nvidia are all getting rich using the same framework

Why do cryptocurrency projects always like to change their names?

Global Launch: As predictions become the most scarce asset in the AI era, Manadia is defining the next generation of the value internet

Who is footing the bill for the $64 billion accounting frenzy?

I never expected that the first application of AI x Crypto would be in security auditing

What is your view on Binance's competitive advantages?

ETH has entered a non-consensus phase, and the turning point is approaching!

The shift in the cloud of the air: from despising stablecoins a year ago to the high-profile entry of capital today

The survival dilemma of small and medium exchanges behind the withdrawal anomalies exposed by AscendEX

Why Is Bitcoin Falling Below $60K? 5 Key Market Drivers Explained
Bitcoin has dropped sharply amid ETF outflows, Strategy stock weakness, AI stock rallies, and changing Fed expectations. Explore the key forces driving BTC’s latest correction and what traders should watch next.

Bitcoin vs. Gold in 2026: Which Asset Performs Better in Different Markets?

Morning News | The draft amendment to the People's Bank of China Law aims to clarify the legal status of digital renminbi; South Korea will transfer about 40 unregistered virtual asset service providers to law enforcement agencies

The cryptocurrency industry has entered the "Show Me" era: merely relying on vision is no longer enough

Interpreting the Ethereum Foundation's new structure: Reaffirming self-sovereignty amid institutional trends

Former SpaceX engineer reconstructs the financial execution system using first principles






