I often see bounties that allocate large tokens even equivalent to $ 1 million in tokens.
Then there are also bounties that have a small allocation of around $ 50k USD in tokens ...
Often, these large bounty allocations are meant to attract more hunters but do not be fooled into thinking this are more profitable than those that issue less. You have to check the terms of the bounty first.
Few things to consider whether is't profitable or not:
- Is the campaign limited to a few participants? Usually, these large pools allow unlimited participants. You will only end up sharing with thousands of other hunters.
- How long will the campaign last? Smaller pools only run for a few weeks compared to the larger pools which usually has "until ICO ends or hardcap is reach"
- Of course, you need to check whether a project has a good chance of having a successful token sale. Will investors find anything unique or special that they will buy into this kind of projects?
I also participated in a bounty campaign like this with a large allocation of the price of tokens, which was quite expensive, $ 1 campaign, only running 4 weeks,
I see from the prospect of Poyek that I think it is good for me to raise $ 15 million, but after entering the stock exchange the price drops to $ 0,0005 and the team argues that the colleague stole the token and sold it until it fell ... until now there has not been any development about the project that.