Web3's dirty secret: Nearly every metric you see is fabricated.
Users? Fake.
Revenue? Inflated.
Activity? Bots and circular flows.
Michael Burry has been exposing big tech's fund recycling scheme.
Web3 took notes and made it worse.
Let me break down the illusion ⬇️
First, let's talk about the token printer go brrrr scheme.
Solana mints $10-15M in NEW tokens daily.
Ethereum? Similar games with different mechanisms.
Where does it go?
Right back into the ecosystem through grants, incentives, and "growth programs."
Same money. Circle jerk. Padded metrics.
This isn't unique to one chain. It's systemic.
VC-backed projects get funded in tokens.
They deploy on the chain.
They farm incentives using that same capital.
They report "usage" and "revenue."
The foundation points to these numbers as proof of adoption.
Rinse. Repeat. Fabricate.
Now here's where it gets interesting.
Remember big tech's playbook? Investment arms funding startups that buy their cloud services, creating circular revenue streams?
Web3 perfected it.
Foundations fund projects with native tokens.
Projects pay fees in those same tokens.
Foundations report fee revenue.
Analysts call it "real economic value."
It's theater.
Let's address the elephant: user numbers.
Chains boast millions of addresses.
But how many are real humans using these apps daily?
Less than 0.1% of the world engages with Web3 on a daily basis.
That's not early adoption. That's nonexistence dressed up as innovation.
The entire industry has fewer than 30,000 full-time developers.
Think about that.
25 million developers worldwide.
Fewer than 30k in Web3.
Yet we're supposed to believe millions of users are flooding into dApps that barely function?
The math doesn't math.
Here's what really happens:
Bots inflate transaction counts.
Wash trading creates fake volume.
Airdrop farmers create thousands of wallets.
Incentive programs bribe temporary activity.
The moment incentives stop? Ghost town.
We've seen it repeatedly.
Projects launch with massive TVL.
Incentives end.
90% vanishes overnight.
That wasn't adoption. That was mercenary capital chasing subsidized yields with recycled money.
But surely revenue numbers are objective, right?
Wrong.
When the foundation controls token emissions, funds ecosystem projects, and those projects generate fees in that same token, you're not measuring market demand.
You're measuring how well you can recycle your own capital.
This is exactly what Burry has been calling out in big tech.
The difference? Big tech at least has real users and actual products people depend on.
Web3 is larping adoption while fighting over scraps in an industry that barely exists.
Everyone claims crypto is early.
But nobody acts like it.
Instead of building for the next billion users, projects compete for the same 100k degens.
Inflating metrics. Gaming dashboards. Fabricating narratives of success.
All while calling it "decentralization."
The reality check:
Most chains have no meaningful organic usage.
Most dApps have no real revenue outside token incentives.
Most "users" are either bots, farmers, or the same people across multiple wallets.
The usage you think you see? It's an illusion.
So what's the solution?
Stop celebrating vanity metrics.
Start demanding transparency on organic vs incentivized activity.
Call out circular token flows disguised as revenue.
Focus on actual users with real use cases, not mercenary yield farmers.
Or keep pretending and wonder why adoption never comes.
Web3 has world-changing potential.
But we'll never get there by lying to ourselves about where we actually are.
The fabricated metrics serve VCs and founders dumping on retail.
They don't serve builders or the vision of a decentralized future.
It's time to demand better.
Call out the BS. Support projects with real usage and transparent metrics. Stop falling for inflated dashboards and recycled revenue.
Because if we don't fix this, Web3 will collapse under the weight of its own lies before it ever reaches mainstream adoption.
The choice is yours.