In the race to acquire users quickly, airdrops, giveaways, and bounty tasks have become go-to tactics for many crypto projects. They’re easy to deploy, attention-grabbing, and often deliver impressive numbers—on the surface. In Indonesia, these tactics can seem especially promising. With one of the most active and digitally connected crypto user bases in the world, campaigns often generate a visible surge: Telegram groups fill up overnight, social media lights up with activity, and wallet addresses multiply. But here’s the hard truth: most of this growth is temporary. Users join for the incentives, not the product. Once the tokens are claimed,…