Web3 coins
1,026 coins #24 Page 10| | Coins | | | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| | 451 | | $ | +0.04% | |
| | 452 | | $ | -67.53% | |
| | 453 | | $ | -1.95% | |
| | 454 | | $ | -0.10% | |
| | 455 | | $ | -6.83% | |
| | 456 | | $ | -9.52% | |
| | 457 | | $ | -3.86% | |
| | 458 | | $ | -11.29% | |
| | 459 | | $ | +1.55% | |
| | 460 | | $ | -1.95% | |
| | 461 | | $ | -2.11% | |
| | 462 | | $ | -9.49% | |
| | 463 | | $ | +0.13% | |
| | 464 | | $ | +0.00% | |
| | 465 | | $ | +126.19% | |
| | 466 | | $ | -15.02% | |
| | 467 | | $ | -19.03% | |
| | 468 | | $ | +19.49% | |
| | 469 | | $ | +12.33% | |
| | 470 | | $ | -12.07% | |
| | 471 | | $ | -11.87% | |
| | 472 | | $ | -0.56% | |
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Trending Web3 coins
| Coins | Price | 24h | |
|---|---|---|---|
| | | $ | -3.45% |
| | | $ | +4.25% |
| | | $ | -0.43% |
| | | $ | -3.85% |
| | | $ | -3.20% |
Top gainers
| Coins | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | $ | +29.87% | ||
| | | $ | +21.69% | ||
| | | $ | +16.87% | ||
| | | $ | +13.00% | ||
| | | $ | +12.95% | ||
| All gainers | |||||
What is a Web 3.0 Coin?
A Web 3.0 coin is the native token of a decentralised internet protocol—blockchains, storage networks, oracle layers, or identity systems—that replaces centralised Web-2 services with open, user-owned infrastructure.
These tokens pay for gas, reward contributors, govern upgrades, and grant access to censorship-resistant storage, compute, data, or social graphs.
Web 3.0 Pillars (and the coins that power them)
| Pillar | Function | Example Coins |
|---|---|---|
| Decentralised storage | User-owned file/cloud services | FIL (Filecoin), AR (Arweave), STORJ |
| Oracle/data feeds | Trust-min off-chain data | LINK (Chainlink), BAND, DIA |
| Indexing/query | Google for blockchains | GRT (The Graph) |
| Identity/NS | Self-owned usernames | ENS, AVAX (Avvy), DOT (KILT) |
| Compute/gpu | AWS on-chain | RNDR, AKT (Akash), GLM (Golem) |
| Social/media | Creator-owned platforms | STEEM, DESO, ALEX (creator token) |
Key Traits of Web 3.0 Coins
- User-owned – token holders govern protocol upgrades via DAOs.
- Open access – no KYC, no platform ban; wallets = login.
- Interoperable – APIs/subgraphs let dApps talk across chains.
- Censorship-resistant – data/content stored on IPFS, Arweave, oracles.
- Revenue share – staking or burning redirects protocol fees to holders.
Spotlight Web 3.0 Coins
- Chainlink (LINK) – decentralised oracle network; feeds price, weather, sports data to smart contracts.
- Filecoin (FIL) – IPFS-based storage market; pay FIL to store/retrieve files.
- The Graph (GRT) – indexing protocol; query blockchain data like Google queries the web.
- Render (RNDR) – distributed GPU rendering; artists pay RNDR for cloud compute.
- Akash (AKT) – decentralised cloud compute; lease CPU/GPU cheaper than AWS.
- Arweave (AR) – permanent storage; one-time fee stores data forever.
Benefits vs. Web 2.0
- Creator economics – no 45 % platform cut; fans buy tokens directly.
- Data ownership – users control keys, not Facebook/Google.
- 24/7 markets – tokenised storage, compute, data trade globally.
- Composable money – tokens plug into DeFi pools, NFT marketplaces, DAO treasuries.
- Exit-resistant – protocol keeps running even if the front-end is taken down.
Risks & Limitations
- Thin liquidity – micro-cap Web 3 tokens can swing 20 % daily.
- Storage/oracle risk – off-chain data must be accurate; malicious feeder = bad output.
- Regulatory fog – decentralised cloud may still need KYC for fiat on-ramps.
- Token dilution – inflation to pay node operators can pressure price.
- Tech early – many protocols are beta; bugs or hacks can drain treasuries.
Final Thoughts
Web 3.0 coins fund the infrastructure of a user-owned internet—storage, data, compute, identity, and social graphs.
They turn users into stakeholders, cut out middlemen, and open global 24/7 markets for digital services.
Treat them like early-stage infrastructure stocks: evaluate adoption, node growth, revenue burn, and competitive moats before investing.