Author: Ken Alabi, CoinTelegraph; Compiler: Tao Zhu, Golden Finance
Every four years, a few months after the Bitcoin halving, the blockchain ecosystem comes under intense public scrutiny. This period, which typically lasts more than a year, is driven by a basic economic principle: when the supply of an asset decreases while demand remains stable or increases, its value typically rises. Historically, this supply shock has triggered a Bitcoin-led market appreciation, sparking increased interest and engagement from users, developers, investors, and policymakers.
In these periods after the halving, the blockchain industry has showcased its projects, technological innovations, and potential utility. None of the previous cycles has produced a blockchain application that clearly outperforms existing technologies in any particular area. However, the core advantages of blockchain—immutability enabled by private key cryptography, data transparency, and user asset sovereignty—continue to attract innovators. These features have been creatively applied to a wide range of areas, including borderless payment systems, DeFi, NFTs, gaming systems with recorded in-game assets, fan and loyalty tokens, transparent grant and charity spending systems, agricultural subsidies, and loan tracking.
While past cycles have highlighted blockchain’s potential, the next period promises to pilot new use cases, as described below.
Lessons from past halving cycles
The period following the 2012 halving highlighted the potential for an unintermediated, borderless payment system. Before Bitcoin, intermediary payments and slow cross-border transactions were the norm—international transfers took days, and checks cleared customs similarly slowly. Bitcoin hinted at a future of seamless payments, with early adopters tracking the number of businesses accepting Bitcoin. However, scalability issues and rising transaction costs limited this utility. Ironically, many blockchain networks have prevented their success through fee structures that hinder growth. This cycle ended with security breaches, most notably the Mt. Gox hack, which occurred 20 months after the halving.
The 2016 cycle sparked an explosion in initial coin offerings (ICOs), democratizing access to venture capital. Ordinary individuals could now invest in early-stage projects — an opportunity once reserved for large financial institutions. However, the market was flooded with tokens backed only by white papers. A lack of investor protection and accountability led to the rapid collapse of many ICOs. Most projects from that era are now obsolete, and even the largest ICOs are no longer ranked among the top 100 blockchain projects.
In 2020, three major trends dominated: DeFi initiatives, NFTs, and play-to-earn (P2E) games. DeFi projects promise unsustainable returns — sometimes exceeding 100% — by minting more tokens to provide yields without any economic activity to back them. Similarly, NFTs are valued at sky-high valuations, with some being little more than pixel art that cannot hold value. Metaverse hype has faded as expectations of mass virtual adoption have failed to materialize. P2E games rely on inflationary token economics that collapse when growth stalls, exposing the fragility of these models.
The post-halving cycle in 2024 kicks off with the approval of a U.S. Bitcoin ETF, formally integrating cryptocurrencies into traditional financial markets.This move, coupled with the blockchain community’s growing influence on the democratic process, marks a significant shift.
This is the first time crypto assets are inside the financial system rather than outside it, which has the potential to lead to balanced regulation rather than outright hostility to the technology. People are seeing its utility at its core and discussing it. The US is poised to take a leading role in the adoption of blockchain technology, which is a good sign, especially given the role the US has played in other prior technological innovations and advancements. The next question is: how far will this integration go? Will we see more countries adding crypto assets to their national reserves, not just the one or two that already have them? In addition to regulatory developments, there are several blockchain applications ready for scrutiny this cycle. Tokenizing real-world assets and decentralizing their financing has gained traction. RWAs enable asset owners to directly benefit from blockchain-based financing. Key areas include real estate and housing financing, stocks, bonds, treasuries, agricultural financing, DePIN, and DePUT. Blockchain-AI Synergy AI, combined with blockchain, is emerging as a powerful force. Decentralized management and secure data processing of AI models offer new solutions, especially in terms of privacy. AI can go beyond solutions like ZK-SNARKs by managing encrypted data, disclosing data or proofs of data only to its owner (upon its owner’s instructions) or to authorized law enforcement agencies under certain conditions (depending on the blockchain’s makeup).
Microtransactions
Traditional financial systems cannot support microtransactions due to their high operational costs. With a low-cost transaction model, blockchain is a natural fit for micropayments, especially for content consumption. This could eliminate outdated bundling practices in media and drive a new era of seamless payments.
Memecoins and Celebrity Tokens
Memecoins have proliferated, with nearly 10 of the top 100 tokens by market cap currently, but have little real utility. Low-cost blockchains and user-friendly token creation tools have fueled this trend. Meme tokens launched by or around well-known public figures are also growing in popularity, but most are similarly lacking in utility.
Stablecoins
Stablecoins continue to bridge traditional finance and blockchain. As faster, cheaper blockchains dominate the cycle, stablecoins are being widely used for payments, challenging legacy systems such as slow check clearing and expensive cross-border transfers. Regulatory clarity could propel stablecoins toward mainstream adoption.
What early data reveals
Toronet Research tracked the performance of tokens in each category from January to May 2024, predicting trends in December. Findings:

Data is sorted by price growth rate in January 2025. Source: Toronet Research, January 2025.
The data shows that memecoins, AI-related tokens, and RWA tokens are the leaders in early growth. Other observations include that all categories have seen volume growth, which is common in a period when interest and participation in blockchain projects seems to increase every four years. DePIN projects may not experience much growth at the beginning of the cycle, although one or more innovative projects may have some breakthroughs. The growth of layer 2 projects exceeds the growth of layer 1 projects, or absorbs most of the growth that the latter will experience. The results for January 2025 are presented in chart form below.

Bar chart of price growth trend in January 2025. Source: Toronet Research.
CoinGecko’s Q3 2024 crypto industry report reviewed popular categories by web traffic, with similar findings for the top three categories. Another observation from the Toronet Research report is that, as we have seen in past cycles, applications with little utility that sparked a frenzy in the previous cycle, such as ICOs in 2017 and NFTs in 2021, tend to be discredited in the next cycle. Developers and industry leaders should work to steer new adopters toward sustainable, utility-driven projects to reduce market volatility and minimize investor disillusionment. This will reduce the intensity of the four-year boom-and-bust cycle as well as the extent and number of disillusioned investors, many of whom have lined up to chase memecoins and ultimately worthless airdrops. Will we break this cycle? The current cycle presents the most significant opportunity for blockchain to make a lasting impact yet. The industry is poised for meaningful growth with increasing institutional integration, more thoughtful regulatory commitment, and a shift toward real-world utility. The growing acceptance and integration of blockchain solutions in the broader economy, along with the potential for thoughtful regulatory regulation on the horizon, could lead to better outcomes in this cycle than before.