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M. Cap: $3.00 T −0.44%24h Vol: $95.01 B −26.68%BTC: $88,056.88 −0.18%ETH: $2,970.02 −0.67%S&P 500: $6,834.37 0.00%Gold: $4,340.10 0.00%BTC Dominance: 58.50%
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D3 D3

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This Token has an activity to participate. This might be granted with rewards for early participants. Proceed to Activity section to find out more details until it is finished.

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At the moment, the Project may be in preliminary stages (Seed, Private Sale, Presale, ICO). The information provided below may be inaccurate (Beta) and being updated.

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Funds Raised
$30.00 M
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About D3 (D3)

So what’s the point of the D3 token anyway?

At its core, the D3 token sits behind the idea that domains shouldn’t be static Web2 property but liquid, programmable assets. The team hasn’t published full tokenomics yet—no supply tables or emissions—but the direction is clear: governance, ecosystem incentives, and the connective tissue for DomainFi. It’s not trying to be another trading coin; it’s closer to infrastructure glue.

How does Doma actually function beneath the surface?

Doma keeps full DNS behavior intact while letting domains behave like on-chain tokens. That blend is odd at first glance, but it solves the biggest issue: you can tokenize a name without breaking the internet that already relies on it. Email still works, websites still resolve, and yet the asset moves across chains. That’s the bridge D3 keeps talking about.

Why does turning domains into tokens even matter?

Because domains are valuable but painfully illiquid. Fractional ownership, collateralization, trading—none of that really existed before. Suddenly these assets interact with usd, usdt, and everything DeFi offers. It’s easy to dismiss at first, but once you see a premium name split into ERC-20 shares, the shift feels… kind of inevitable.

Do we know anything solid about tokenomics or unlocks?

Not really—nothing official. No allocation chart, no vesting calendar. What we do know is that early rewards are earned through behavior: swaps, staking, liquidity, even small on-chain activity. It’s less “here’s a cliff in 18 months” and more “prove you’re part of the ecosystem,” which makes sense for infra this early.

Who actually backed D3, and why did it make noise?

Two rounds, $30M usd total. Paradigm led the big one, Coinbase Ventures joined in, and the seed round brought in Shima Capital, Maelstrom, Infinite Capital, C2Ventures, and others. People noticed because these aren’t tourists—they back projects that reshape underlying rails, not just hype cycles.

What’s really moving the roadmap forward?

The cadence has been steady: testnet → mainnet → participation systems like point farming. Not flashy, but deliberate. The integrations with registrars matter more than tweets—if you’re tokenizing real domains, you need the folks who manage millions of them to plug in. That part is happening slowly but clearly.

Can you trade the D3 token yet?

Short answer: no. No listings, no usdt/usd pairs, nothing live on CEXs or DEXs. What is tradable are the tokenized domains themselves, which behave like crypto assets even though the governance token hasn’t launched. Premarket means exactly that here.

Are the community incentives real or just noise?

The testnet campaign ended, but the point-farming season is active and carries real weight. Holding domain NFTs, staking domain tokens, providing liquidity—these all influence your badge tier. Diamond, Ruby, Emerald… the hierarchy sticks with your wallet identity, which makes the early phases feel more meaningful than the usual airdrop scramble.

And the risks—what should people not gloss over?

It’s new territory. Domain-backed assets may invite regulatory attention, and liquidity at scale is still a big unknown. Cross-chain movement introduces technical risk. The vision is compelling, but it’s also early infrastructure, and early infrastructure always comes with seams still showing.

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