🎉 The #CandyDrop Futures Challenge is live — join now to share a 6 BTC prize pool!
📢 Post your futures trading experience on Gate Square with the event hashtag — $25 × 20 rewards are waiting!
🎁 $500 in futures trial vouchers up for grabs — 20 standout posts will win!
📅 Event Period: August 1, 2025, 15:00 – August 15, 2025, 19:00 (UTC+8)
👉 Event Link: https://www.gate.com/candy-drop/detail/BTC-98
Dare to trade. Dare to win.
DePIN Ecosystem Panorama: In-depth Analysis of the Current State, Challenges, and Future Opportunities in Six Major Areas
The Current Status and Future Outlook of DePIN: Depth Analysis
Editor's Note
DePIN (Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Network) discusses how to utilize decentralized technology to build and manage physical infrastructure in the real world, potentially having a disruptive impact on traditional industries. Understanding DePIN is crucial for grasping the future development direction of Web3.
This report systematically divides DePIN into six subfields: telecommunications, energy, computing, decentralized AI, data, and services, outlining the entire ecosystem. Each field includes actual operational data of major projects (such as user growth, revenue models) to quantify market feasibility.
The report objectively points out the "imperfect reality" of DePIN: the sustainability challenges of token economics, competition with centralized incumbents, and the uncertainties brought by emerging technologies (6G, photonic computing, distributed training). This balanced perspective aids in rational assessment.
Core Content Overview
This report delves into the concept, current status, challenges, and future of DePIN (Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Network).
DePIN aims to reshape the construction and management model of traditional physical infrastructure through blockchain and decentralized incentives, achieving higher resource utilization, transparency, and resilient ownership. The report emphasizes that true disruption lies in addressing the pain points of high costs and low efficiency in centralized models, rather than merely pursuing "decentralization."
The report divides the DePIN field into six major subcategories:
Telecommunications and Connectivity: From DeWi to fixed wireless and public WiFi, a detailed analysis of the technical approaches and market positioning of projects such as Helium, Karrier, Really, Andrena, Althea, Dabba, and WiCrypt.
Energy: Distributed Energy Resources (DER), Virtual Power Plants (VPP), and on-chain financing platforms, covering the business models and regulatory challenges of protocols such as Daylight, SCRFUL, Plural Energy, Glow, StarPower, and Power Ledger.
Computing, Storage, and Bandwidth: Discussed the decentralized computing markets (Akash, Fluence, IONet, Hyperbolic, Render, Livepeer) and storage networks (Jackal, Arweave, Filecoin), comparing their performance and differences.
Decentralized AI: Projects such as Prime Intellect, Bittensor, Gensyn, Prodia, Ritual, and Grass are listed, analyzing the integration prospects of decentralized training, validation, and data layers.
Data Capture and Management: Emphasizes the market value and monetization challenges of content distribution, mapping, geolocation, and climate/weather data.
Services: Showcased innovative use cases such as Dimo, PuffPaw, Heale, Silencio, Blackbird, and Shaga, which leverage cryptocurrency incentives to drive real-world behavior.
Although DePIN shows great potential and is considered one of the most sustainable long-term investment directions in the cryptocurrency field, it is still in the early stages of development and faces several "imperfect" real-world challenges, such as the dilemma of token economic models, genuine demand and adoption, supply-demand imbalance, competition, and regulation.
Despite these challenges, the report maintains an optimistic outlook on DePIN, believing in its significant long-term potential.
The key to future development lies in addressing the sustainability issues of token economics, truly focusing on solving meaningful real-world problems, and potentially finding breakthroughs in innovative fields such as environmental monitoring, biometrics, and personal data sharing (as mentioned in the report regarding bioacoustics, environmental DNA, sleep/dream data), thereby guiding subsequent innovations.