Key perspectives on Pi Network

1️⃣ Fi Network is a digital currency with a deflationary structure.

One of the biggest characteristics of the Pi Network is that the supply does not increase infinitely.

Initially, anyone could participate in mining, but mining rewards are designed to gradually decrease over time.

This is a similar concept to Bitcoin's halving, in which the speed at which new Pi is issued gradually decreases as the number of network participants increases.

In other words, as time passes, the amount of Pi newly supplied decreases, and if actual use and demand increases, it can work in a direction that relatively strengthens scarcity.

Here's the key:

  • New issuance volume continues to decrease
  • The number of users can continue to increase
  • As the ecosystem uses expand, the scarcity of distributable Pi increases.
  • In the long run, deflationary characteristics are likely to strengthen.

Therefore, Pi Network has a structurally different philosophy from inflation-type tokens that simply increase issuance.

2️⃣ There is an essential difference from inflation coins.

Many cryptocurrencies continuously issue new coins to maintain the network or provide staking rewards.

In this structure, price dilution may occur as the volume released to the market increases over time.

On the other hand, Pi Network has the following differences:

  • Mining rewards gradually decrease
  • It is not an indiscriminate new issuance structure.
  • Prioritize expansion of actual user base
  • Build an ecosystem centered on actual users through KYC authentication
  • Designed with the goal of forming a long-term economic ecosystem

In other words, it is important that it is not simply a “system that prints more coins,” but an approach that seeks to create value based on actual usability and network participation.

3️⃣ Pi aims to be a ‘fixed value-based digital currency’ rather than a simple speculative coin with rapid fluctuations.

Currently, the prices of cryptocurrencies on many exchanges fluctuate significantly due to short-term trading and speculative demand.

It is common for it to fluctuate by tens of percent per day, which is why it is difficult to use as currency in the real economy.

The following concepts have been discussed in the Pi Network community for a long time:

  • Use Pi as a real-life payment method, not just a speculative asset
  • Used for product and service transactions
  • Use as a payment method at local stores and online markets
  • Pursuing stable exchange value formation

In particular, some communities are attempting to “consensus on value centered on actual use” through concepts such as GCV (Global Consensus Value).Of course, this is not an official pricing policy but a voluntary value discussion by the community, but the important point is that the Pi ecosystem emphasizes the direction of ‘actually usable digital currency’ rather than simple short-term market profit.

To summarize, it is as follows.

✔ Pi Network has a deflationary structure in which new supply decreases over time. ✔ It does not depend on infinite issuance like inflation-type coins. ✔ Aim for a digital currency ecosystem based on actual use rather than short-term speculation. ✔ It is developing with the goal of stable exchange value and participation in real economic activities.

In the end, the key to Pi Network is not “how much it skyrockets,” but “how many people actually use it.”

It's important to remember that the true value of digital assets comes from usability, not charts.