Fun fact: Most L2s are built to extract.
Use them, and someone else earns.
Usually a sequencer (often centralized). Always⊠not you.
Iâve been spending time looking into @tenprotocol, and the more I dig, the more it feels like theyâre trying to flip that model on its head.
Not with slogans. With actual architecture.
Hereâs what stood out:
The tokenomics are unusually restrained.
Only 13.87% of $TEN is unlocked at launch.The rest (86%+) is locked and released over time.
You donât do that if youâre trying to create a fast exit. You do that if you want time to build trust.
Then thereâs how the supply is allocated.
Over 43% is reserved for the community and ecosystem. Not in a vague âecosystem growthâ line item either.
Itâs broken down, clearly:
â 22% treasury
â 20% community programs
â 1.25% for funding new ideas
You can argue about whether thatâs enough. But you canât say itâs not intentional.
6% of supply is earmarked as direct community rewards. Half unlocked at launch. The rest vests over time.
That kind of split says a lot:
âWeâll reward early adopters⊠but only if they stick around.â
Itâs a small psychological shift. But itâs the kind that builds alignment.
Vesting schedules tell you everything about a projectâs incentives. Hereâs how TEN approaches it:
â Investors: 6-month cliff + 2-year unlock
â Team: 1-year cliff + 3-year unlock
â Community funds: 30% upfront, rest metered out
VC in shamblesâŠ
It reads like a team that isnât just confident⊠but patient.
Now hereâs where things get more interesting.
Most L2s collect massive fees.
Arbitrum, Optimism, Base⊠theyâve pulled in $587m+ from sequencer revenue.
That value doesnât reach users..it goes upstream.
TEN is one of the first Iâve seen that shares sequencer rewards with the people actually using the network.
No staking, lockups or âdefi games.â
You transact, you earn tickets, tickets convert to $eth. Thatâs it.
Feels like how it should work.
Theyâve already run 24m+ testnet transactions. Over 600k wallets and itâs not even mainnet yet.
So this isnât just a good idea. Itâs a working system. But what really made me pause is what theyâre doing with AI.
Encrypted agents.
Live, on-chain (not whitepaper ideas).
Real components like:
â Gaia (creator tools)
â Griffin (DeFi bots)
â Omo (encrypted coordination)
â Warden (logic protection)
â Janction (decentralized compute)
Each one does something specific. Each one is already live or moving. And theyâre all building on TEN.
What TEN is building isnât âAI hypeâ with a coat of crypto paint. Itâs a new design space:
Encrypted AI agents that reason, act, and transact on-chain (privately, transparently & autonomously).
Where the value doesnât just come from using the systemâŠIt comes from being part of it.
Thatâs the shift.
I donât know where all this leads. No one does. But itâs rare to see an L2 this early that feels both grounded and ambitious.
Token design that respects time.
Infra that shares upside.
AI thatâs not a gimmick.
TEN feels like one of those projects thatâs building⊠not for todayâs market, but for the world that comes after it.
Might be worth paying attention.

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